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Published in 1998, this book provides an analysis of the development of learning support for students with special needs from the 1970s to the present. Based on case study research the book examines the complexities of defining special needs and considers ways in which marginalization of students is created and maintained.
Published in 1998, this book provides an analysis of the development of learning support for students with special needs from the 1970s to the present. Based on case study research the book examines the complexities of defining special needs and considers ways in which marginalization of students is created and maintained.
With the redevelopment of the former car park adjacent to Baskerville House as part of the Library of Birmingham project, the opportunity arose to examine some of the most complete remains of the 19th-century industrialisation in Birmingham. Birmingham Archaeology of the University of Birmingham, in association with Carillion and the Birmingham City Council, undertook an archaeological excavation, before the construction of the new Library of Birmingham, in an area between Cambridge Street and Centenary Square, Broad Street in the city centre. The excavation identified six phases of activity pre-dating, during and after the completion of the brass metal works.
The site of Delamere Street lies just outside the North gate of the Roman and medieval Chester (n/w England) and in recent years has been subject to intensive investigation as part of the Gorse Stacks development. This publication represents the culmination of those investigations carried out by Birmingham Archaeology during 2006 and 2008. Contents: 1) The Roman Quarry (R. Cuttler, C. Hewitson and K. Krawiec); 1a) The Excavations (Kristina Krawiec); 1b) The Roman Pottery (Jane Timby (with The Samian Ware by Felicity Wild); 1d) The Roman Ceramic Building Materials (Alison Heke); 1e) The Roman Vessel Glass Glass and Small Finds (Hilary Cool (with The Roman Coins by Roger White); 1f) The Metalwork by Erica Macey-Bracken and Rod MacKenzie; 1g) Bone Artefacts and Craft Waste (Iain Baxter and Malcolm Hislop); 1h) The Animal Bone (Ian Baxter); 1i) The Human Bone (Sam Hepburn); 1j) The Charred Plant Remains (Pam Grinter); 1k) Discussion (Chris Hewitson and Kristina Krawiec); 2) The Post-Medieval Quarry; 2a) The Excavations (Kristina Krawiec, Sam Hepburn, and Chris Hewitson); 2b) The Post-Medieval Pottery (Leigh Dodd); 2c) Small and Other Finds (Leigh Dodd et al); 2d) The Ceramic Building Material and Architectural Stone (Jennie Stopford and Michael Lobb); 2e) The Animal Bone, Human Bone and Shell (Matilda Holmes, Sam Hepburn and Erica Macey-Bracken. 3) The Historical Development of the Post-Medieval Quarry at Gorse Stacks.
The road improvements around the inner ring road of Derby (East Midlands, England) have led to the archaeological investigation of a number of sites over the past five years. These sites have included remains from the prehistoric, Roman, medieval and post-medieval periods, although the majority of the remains have related to the last 900 years. The work has allowed a picture of the development of the western side of Derby to be built up over the course of its evolution. In many respects the non-selective random nature of the development has allowed disparate sites in location, function and chronology to be examined in the same project in a way that would not have been achieved by targeted research led investigation. This has allowed a broad picture of the area to emerge that may suggest patterns in the development of the city suburbs. Contents: Chapter 1 Introduction and background to the work; Chapter 2) Roman and Prehistoric Derby; Chapter 3) Medieval and early Post-Medieval Derby the western fringes; Chapter 4) 18th and 19th century derby - the development of the west end suburb; Chapter 5) The artefact, ecofact and environmental evidence; Chapter 6) Conclusions.
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