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Young Ah Lee; Marian Patricia Bea Francisco; Shariffa Khalid Qais Al-Said; Muna Yousuf Abdullah Al Bulushi; Ye Wang – International Journal of Comparative Education and Development, 2024
Purpose: This comparative study explored the perceptions of educational stakeholders in Oman and the Philippines concerning children with disabilities and the goals of special education. Stakeholders' perspectives can influence their professional behaviours and attitudes, which, in turn, can profoundly impact children with disabilities who already…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Stakeholders, Comparative Analysis, Attitudes toward Disabilities
Debbie Rickard – Kairaranga, 2024
Handicapped, special, or diverse? Segregated, mainstreamed, or included? The field of disability and difference within education, is vast and wide-ranging. This review of the literature highlights how, although we have come far in the last 40 years, there is still much to learn about effective inclusion of disabled children in early childhood…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Disabilities, Inclusion, Students with Disabilities
Sara Sheffler – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The least restrictive environment (LRE) is the educational placement determined necessary for obtaining maximum educational benefits. The individualized education program (IEP) team determines the LRE after analyzing the student's academic and behavioral data and assessing the student's unique needs. Specific special educational labels may produce…
Descriptors: General Education, Elementary School Teachers, Teaching Experience, Students with Disabilities
Mukuna, Robert Kananga; Maizere, James – American Annals of the Deaf, 2022
The experiences of d/Deaf and hard of hearing children enrolled in a mainstream school in Zimbabwe are explored. The study used a qualitative approach and a narrative case study design. A sample consisting of two boys and three girls whose ages ranged from 13 to 14 years was purposively selected. Face-to-face semistructured interviews were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Mainstreaming
A Disability Studies Response to JTE's Themed Issue on Diversity and Disability in Teacher Education
Collins, Kathleen M. – Journal of Teacher Education, 2013
In a recent themed issue of "Journal of Teacher Education" ("JTE" 63.4) about issues of disability, diversity, and teacher education, guest editors Marleen Pugach, Linda Blanton, and Lani Florian (2012) invite readers to participate in "honest, difficult, and much needed dialogue across the many diversity constituencies in teacher education" (p.…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Disabilities, Student Diversity, Special Education Teachers
Ravet, Jackie – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2011
This paper explores some of the tensions that frequently arise in debates about inclusion and the education of children and young people on the autism spectrum. This debate is often characterised by bipolar thinking and moral posturing, and is obscured by misunderstandings and omissions. This can create confusion for practitioners trying their…
Descriptors: Autism, Inclusion, Mainstreaming, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Ashby, Christine – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities, 2012
This article explores the benefits and challenges of operating an inclusive elementary and special education teacher preparation program within a disability studies framework. How does such a program balance issues of theory and practice? How does it provide students with a critical approach that essentially views disability as a social and…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Special Education, Teaching Methods, Inclusion
Hornby, Garry – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2011
This review essay examines "Special Educational Needs: A New Look" by Mary Warnock which was initially published as a "pamphlet" by the Philosophy of Education Society of Great Britain in 2005. In this new edition, the original publication is reprinted as the first chapter and Brahm Norwich contributes a chapter in which he responds to the issues…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Special Education, Student Needs
Veck, Wayne – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2009
This paper attempts to make important connections between listening and inclusive education and the refusal to listen and exclusion. Two lines of argument are advanced. First, if educators and learners are to include each other within their educational institutions as unique individuals, then they will need to listen attentively to each other.…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Mainstreaming, Labeling (of Persons), Stereotypes
Goodley, Dan; Runswick-Cole, Katherine – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2010
Len Barton has pioneered the sociological study of education in the areas of disability studies and inclusive education. This paper addresses an argument developed by Len Barton that social exclusion, of which disablism is one element, (1) has many compounding forms of differing exclusions, (2) is not a natural but a socially constructed process,…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Research Needs, Disabilities, Social Isolation
Matthews, Nicole – Teaching in Higher Education, 2009
Drawing on the insights of critical disability studies, this article addresses anxieties frequently articulated by academic staff around the implementation of the United Kingdom's Disability Discrimination Act: how to accommodate the needs of students with "hidden" impairments. Following the social model of disability, it argues that…
Descriptors: Disability Discrimination, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Policy Analysis
Harry, Beth; Klingner,Janette – Educational Leadership, 2007
The main criterion for eligibility for special education services in schools has been proof of intrinsic deficit. There are two problems with this focus: First, defining and identifying high-incidence disabilities are ambiguous and subjective processes. Second, the focus on disability has become so intertwined with the historical devaluing of…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Minority Groups, Special Education, African American Students
Biklen, Douglas; Kliewer, Christopher – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2006
Definitions of intelligence have traditionally been rooted in literacy competence. In this article, the authors examine two historical examples where societal prejudices and institutional forces worked to limit and regulate access to literacy. The first example illustrates how racism and denial of competence were so profoundly linked and…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Mental Retardation, Communicative Competence (Languages), Autism
Dodge, Kenneth A.; Dishion, Thomas J.; Lansford, Jennifer E. – Society for Research in Child Development, 2006
The problem is well known to every parent of a teenager, every high school teacher, every clinical practitioner, and every social policy maker: vulnerable adolescents risk becoming more deviant through association with deviant peers and peer groups. Deviant peer influences are among the most potent factors in the development of antisocial…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Adolescents, Peer Groups, Program Effectiveness