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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Caryn Onions; David Colley; Matt Wareham – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2024
Creating an emotionally secure learning environment is vital for care-experienced young children. This mixed methods case study followed 10 primary aged children to determine the possibility of improving emotional security in the classroom. Data were also collected from teaching staff. Findings suggest that the majority of participants maintained…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Special Schools, Residential Schools, Self Esteem
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Kaye, Helen; Barrett, Jane P.; Knightley, Wendy M. – Psychology Learning and Teaching, 2013
Psychology students at the Open University (OU) can choose whether to complete their project work at residential school or by participating in an online equivalent. This study identifies different factors governing module choice and student experience: When choosing residential school, social aspects are important, whereas for online, students are…
Descriptors: Psychology, Preferences, Student Attitudes, Student Projects
West, Elizabeth A.; Jones, Phyllis; Chambers, Dianne; Whitehurst, Teresa – Journal of International Special Needs Education, 2012
The purpose of this multi-perspective collaborative research activity was to analyze moments of teacher learning as perceived by a group of teachers who educate students with the label of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). The researchers in this project acknowledge the value of hearing teachers' perspectives on what works for them in their…
Descriptors: Autism, Foreign Countries, Residential Schools, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Abbott, David; Heslop, Pauline – British Journal of Special Education, 2009
Young people with learning difficulties who go to residential special schools and colleges are highly vulnerable, often living a long way from home. Transition towards adulthood--from school to college, or college and beyond--requires careful planning and support for both young people and their families. Despite national policy and guidance in…
Descriptors: Special Schools, Residential Schools, Mental Retardation, Barriers
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Rose, Richard; Howley, Marie; Fergusson, Ann; Jament, Johnson – British Journal of Special Education, 2009
The relationship between mental health and special educational needs is both complex and misunderstood. In this article, Richard Rose, Professor of Special and Inclusive Education, Marie Howley, Senior Lecturer, Ann Fergusson, Senior Lecturer, and Johnson Jament, a PhD student, all from the Centre for Special Needs Education and Research directed…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Health Needs, Special Education, Special Needs Students
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Robinson, Kathleen – Open Learning, 2009
This study describes the theoretical rationale underpinning the design and implementation of a career-related activity as an optional element of a virtual residential school. The activity comprised an interview with a practising chartered psychologist recorded as an MP3 audio file, which was subsequently supported by an asynchronous discussion…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Student Reaction, Residential Schools, Ethnography
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Heslop, P.; Abbott, D. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2007
Background: Previous research, and official guidance, has suggested that planning for the transition between children's and adults' services is failing young people with intellectual disabilities and their families in the UK. Youngsters placed away from home in residential schools or colleges are likely to be at even greater risk of poor…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Residential Schools, Foreign Countries, Mental Retardation
Vickers, Pete – Adults Learning, 2008
Adult learners with high support needs often have no means of progressing to further provision. In this article, the author discusses Quality Inclusive Pathways (QUIPs), a project creating local multi-agency learning pathways for these learners. The QUIPs project--developed directly from the stated needs of families, carers and the young people…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Residential Schools
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Whitehurst, Teresa – Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, 2008
The risk factors for young people with intellectual disabilities developing a mental health disorder are higher than those found in the general population, yet training is very rarely available to frontline staff. A recent study in the United Kingdom cited prevalence rates of mental ill health among adults with intellectual disabilities ranging…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Severe Mental Retardation, Residential Schools, Mental Health
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Harriss, Louise; Barlow, Jane; Moli, Paul – Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties, 2008
Specialist residential schools have been proposed as a coherent treatment approach for children with severe emotional and behavioural difficulties. This research aimed to explore the perspectives of a range of stakeholders regarding the benefits and disadvantages of attendance at a residential school for children with severe emotional and…
Descriptors: Residential Schools, Behavior Disorders, Special Schools, Special Needs Students
Special Education: Forward Trends, 1979
Principals of three types of schools--a resource center, a residential school with flexible boarding arrangements, and a secondary school with mainstreamed physically handicapped students--discuss their reactions to the Warnock Report (an analysis of special education in Britain). (CL)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Handicapped Children
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Oliphant, John – History of Education, 2006
In earlier "humanitarian" accounts, Britain's voluntary blind institutions exemplified successful nineteenth-century philanthropy and later became effective partners of the state. From the 1970s, Victorian charity came increasingly under criticism and subsequent studies on disability condemn the exclusion and utilitarian training of a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blindness, Educational History, Social Bias
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Maley, Tom – British Journal of Visual Impairment, 2005
An account is given of growing up as a child blinded as a result of a cancer of the eye known as retinoblastoma. The role of his mother is brought out, variously as a source of objective knowledge, of one's personal worth, and of the worth of other people in one's community. The strengths and weaknesses of his first school in his home area and…
Descriptors: Residential Schools, Social Influences, Cancer, Blindness
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Boulton, John; Mirsky, Laura – Reclaiming Children and Youth: The Journal of Strength-based Interventions, 2006
Restorative practices focus on repairing the harm to relationships rather than piling on more punishment for violations. Originally popularized in formal conferences between a victim and offender in the justice system, restorative practices have been extended to educational and treatment settings. This article describes how the adversarial climate…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, Special Schools, Males, Foreign Countries
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Murdoch, Heather – American Annals of the Deaf, 1996
A survey of 390 residential deaf, and hard-of-hearing students, ages 3 to 24 years, in the United Kingdom, found that children without additional disabilities did not show stereotyped behaviors, though about 35% of children with additional disabilities (especially vision, learning, and/or autism) did show such behaviors. (DB)
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Behavior Problems, Children
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