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Mechthild Richter; Julian Nishnik; Alina Borrmann; Marek Grummt; Christian Lindmeier – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
Flexi-schooling, an approach involving at least some instruction both at home and at school, has potential to adapt education to meet the needs of autistic students while also providing in-person school benefits. This systematic international literature review of flexi-schooling for autistic students aims to understand the advantages and…
Descriptors: Flexible Scheduling, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Special Education, Educational Benefits
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Potter, Sophie – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2022
The UK education system is becoming increasingly dominated by exclusive economic and political ideology. The neoliberal agenda marketises young people and encourages them to take part in a competitive system. The rise of multi-academy trusts (MATs) further exacerbates an already inequitable system in which young people with special education needs…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Inclusion, Barriers, Special Education
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Anastasia Liasidou – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2024
The article draws interdisciplinary insights from research on trauma to theorize the ways in which inclusion can be enriched and diversified by incorporating a trauma-informed perspective that is equity-oriented and can facilitate the process of inclusive education reforms. Despite the existence of a significant body of research documenting the…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Trauma Informed Approach, Equal Education, Trauma
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Watson, Karen – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2022
Over past decades in early childhood education, there has been an emerging critique of developmental discourses. Despite this, the universality of child development theory persists and along with it, expectations of a linear progression via prescribed stages and ages. Developmentalism produces a normal in the classroom that sanctions comparisons,…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Students with Disabilities, Child Development, Foreign Countries
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Mortier, Kathleen – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2020
Inclusion of students with severe intellectual disabilities in general education classrooms remains a major challenge in education systems around the world. This is despite the manifest value of inclusion: it is consistent with today's hybrid, diverse knowledge societies, there are direct benefits for all students involved, and inclusion is a…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Inclusion, Students with Disabilities, Severe Disabilities
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Liasidou, Anastasia; Hadjiyiannakou, Anastasia – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2019
The paper aims to explore ways in which mothers of children with cerebral palsy (CP) attempt to voice their concerns about current discourses and power imbalances enshrined in special education policy and provision. Mothers' narratives are important in making transparent the multiple forms of 'disablism' experienced by them in their attempts to…
Descriptors: Special Education, Educational Policy, Mothers, Cerebral Palsy
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Bagger, Anette – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2022
Students with special educational needs (SEN) are systematically hindered in their participation in test-taking and, as a result, are also excluded from participating in high-quality learning. Hence, participation in the assessment situation is connected to power relations and future prospects and possibilities to participate in society. This…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Students with Disabilities, Power Structure, Standardized Tests
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Kjaer, Bjørg; Dannesboe, Karen Ida – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2019
In this article, we investigate how the shift towards inclusive education in Danish schools changes and affects the ways in which educational-psychological advisory service (in Danish, PPR) units and school staff collaborate. Since inclusion is generally a matter of ensuring that every child can be accommodated within the mainstream school system,…
Descriptors: Counselor Teacher Cooperation, Psychologists, Consultants, Foreign Countries
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Greenstein, Anat – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2014
The use of creative methods has been advocated within disability and childhood research as a means of including voices of inarticulate participants in research, as it can support and supplement the use of conventional language. This paper draws on a research project aimed at designing "the best school in the world" with five students in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Play, Creativity
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McWhirter, Paula T.; Brandes, Joyce A.; Williams-Diehm, Kendra L.; Hackett, Shannon – Teacher Development, 2016
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the extent to which pre-service educators' interpersonal characteristics affected their attitudes toward teaching students with disabilities (inclusion), as measured by the FIRO-B and ATIES pre- and post-course. The FIRO-B was administered to assess expressed and wanted aspects of three…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Teacher Educators, Teacher Characteristics, Teacher Attitudes
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Liasidou, Anastasia – Educational Policy, 2011
In order to challenge individual deficit imperatives and discursive binaries of "normality and abnormality," which have traditionally held sway over the education of children with presumed special educational needs (SEN), it is crucial to provide alternative and, hence, liberating, theorizations of special education. These new…
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Inclusion, Discourse Analysis, Educational Change
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Dray, Barbara J.; Wisneski, Debora Basler – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2011
Becoming a culturally responsive educator has been at the forefront of the movement to reduce inappropriate referrals to special education and disproportionate representation of students of color within special education. However, for many educators, working with a diverse student population can be more difficult when the student comes from a…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Classroom Techniques, Disabilities, Urban Areas
Crockett, Jean B., Ed.; Billingsley, Bonnie, Ed.; Boscardin, Mary Lynn, Ed. – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2012
This book brings together for the first time research informing leadership practice in special education from preschool through transition into post-secondary settings. It provides comprehensive coverage of 1) disability policy 2) leadership knowledge, 3) school reform, and 4) effective educational leadership practices. Broader in scope than…
Descriptors: Evidence, Teacher Effectiveness, Inclusion, Early Intervention