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This book provides new information on how various inclusion
policies have been implemented in different schools and school
districts in North America and in a range of European countries.
The purpose of inclusion policy is to prevent the marginalization
of people who experience unfavorable circumstances in life. It is
an approach to the education of students with disabilities that is
based on a commitment to what all members of a free society deserve
in order to become fully participating members--a fair chance to
find a meaningful place in their own communities. This book is a
kind of status report on what inclusive education has achieved and
what it may achieve in the future for children and youth with
disabilities. It describes the philosophical, legal, and practical
terrain covered by inclusion policy in general and inclusive
schooling in particular. Contributors assess inclusion policy and
suggest ways to reconceptualize it, bringing to their data analysis
a depth of experience and knowledge about public schooling in their
respective countries. Although inclusion of students with
disabilities in general education classes has been embraced by
politicians and educators calling for equal opportunity in our
society and is being incorporated into national and international
education laws, it continues to be controversial and the debate is
sometimes heated. A goal of this book is to shed some light on this
debate. Is inclusion mostly about student placement? Are students
with disabilities attaining social and learning membership in
general classrooms? Have they benefitted from inclusion? How about
students without disabilities? What have been the benefits? Must
learning take second priority to socialization and friendship? Are
teachers getting the training they need? How do parents feel about
inclusion programs? How do students feel? What kind of curricular
accommodations should be made? These and other questions are
addressed. This volume is based on original papers presented by the
contributing authors in October 1997 at the Rutgers Invitational
Symposium on Education on Inclusive Schooling: National and
International Perspectives.
This book provides new information on how various inclusion
policies have been implemented in different schools and school
districts in North America and in a range of European countries.
The purpose of inclusion policy is to prevent the marginalization
of people who experience unfavorable circumstances in life. It is
an approach to the education of students with disabilities that is
based on a commitment to what all members of a free society deserve
in order to become fully participating members--a fair chance to
find a meaningful place in their own communities.
This book is a kind of status report on what inclusive education
has achieved and what it may achieve in the future for children and
youth with disabilities. It describes the philosophical, legal, and
practical terrain covered by inclusion policy in general and
inclusive schooling in particular. Contributors assess inclusion
policy and suggest ways to reconceptualize it, bringing to their
data analysis a depth of experience and knowledge about public
schooling in their respective countries.
Although inclusion of students with disabilities in general
education classes has been embraced by politicians and educators
calling for equal opportunity in our society and is being
incorporated into national and international education laws, it
continues to be controversial and the debate is sometimes heated. A
goal of this book is to shed some light on this debate. Is
inclusion mostly about student placement? Are students with
disabilities attaining social and learning membership in general
classrooms? Have they benefitted from inclusion? How about students
without disabilities? What have been the benefits? Must learning
take second priority to socialization and friendship? Are teachers
getting the training they need? How do parents feel about inclusion
programs? How do students feel? What kind of curricular
accommodations should be made? These and other questions are
addressed.
This volume is based on original papers presented by the
contributing authors in October 1997 at the Rutgers Invitational
Symposium on Education on "Inclusive Schooling: National and
International Perspectives."
This book describes a constructive theorizing strategy that graduate students and applied searchers can use to improve their beliefs about contemporary social problems. Throughout the use of compelling questions and examples, Mithaug shows readers how to implement this (four-step) strategy to construct explanations for uncertainties about how things work, how they ought to work and what should be done about them. He begins the book with an explanation of the practical features of constructive theorizing and shows how it mirrors general problem solving, practical reasoning, and self-regulated learning. He then demonstrates how to separate the facts, values, and actions of a situation in order to clarify and understand their relationship as well as how a thinking strategy assists in learning to theorize better. This book will enable readers to separate questions of fact, value, and action; explain their differences and similarities; and summarize their explanations in a theory that reconstructs those facts, values, and actions in a more credible and valuable way.
'The book is illuminatory; it operationalizes or provides keys to
operationalizing a process that is shrouded in mystery and
mythology. It extends existing models of dealing with complexity
and making sense of that complexity. It contains useful heuristics
for theorizing that are usable and useful. I believe that the book
is useful and of interest to a wider audience that just students in
education and social sciences' - British Journal of Educational
Psychology Through the use of compelling questions and examples,
Dennis E Mithaug shows readers how to implement his four-step
strategy to construct explanations for uncertainties about how
things work, how they ought to work, and what should be done about
them. He begins the book with an explanation of the practical
features of constructive theorizing and shows how it mirrors
general problem solving, practical reasoning, and self-regulated
learning. He then demonstrates how to separate the facts, value and
actions of a situation in order to clarify and understand their
relationahip as well as how a thinking strategy assists in learning
to theorize better.This book will enable readers to separate
questions of fact, value and action - explain their differences and
similarities - and summarize their explanations in a theory that
reconstructs those facts, values and actions in a more credible and
valuable way.
Equal Opportunity Theory is a clear and comprehensive examination
of the idea of self determination: both the right to
self-determination as well as its expression in our society. Author
Dennis E. Mithaug examines society's collective responsibility for
assuring fair prospects of self-determination for all people. This
inclusive volume also describes how social policies derived from
the theory of equal opportunity actually impact those with the
least likely prospects for self-determination throughout their
lives--the poor, the disabled, and people of color. Author Dennis
E. Mithaug first presents the logical, philosophical, and
psychological basis for equal opportunity theory and then presents
its social and judicial background. From this foundation he shows
how the optimal prospects principle derived from the theory
decreases the discrepancy between the right and the experience of
self-determination for children and adults with significant
physical, mental, social, and economic disadvantages. Although the
main thrust is theoretical, evidence in support of the theory is
based upon a combination of empirical, historical, and logical
sources. Addressing one of the hottest current topics in American
society and public policy today, Equal Opportunity Theory's
timeliness will make it of great interest to students and
professionals in the fields of sociology, psychology, and political
science. "In Equal Opportunity Theory, Dennis E. Mithaug writes
about the discrepancy between the right to self-determination and
the expression of that right, a problem that is salient to most
Americans with disabilities and others who are less well situated
in our society. This discrepancy manifests itself in what may be
the most 'handicapping' aspect of having a disability, being poor,
or being a member of a minority group that experiences frequent
discrimination--the lack of control over one's life. Equal
Opportunity Theory provides a thoughtful, interdisciplinary
treatment of the complex issues related to this problem. The book
provides an important differentiation of the impact of individual
capacity and opportunity theory as a means to resolve the
discrepancy between the right to and experience of
self-determination for individuals whose personal, social, and
economic circumstances are beyond their control. It also provides a
valuable contribution to the debate concerning how best to empower
and enable all individuals to live self-determined lives."
--Michael L. Wehmeyer, The Arc National Headquarters
Equal Opportunity Theory is a clear and comprehensive examination
of the idea of self determination: both the right to
self-determination as well as its expression in our society. Author
Dennis E. Mithaug examines society's collective responsibility for
assuring fair prospects of self-determination for all people. This
inclusive volume also describes how social policies derived from
the theory of equal opportunity actually impact those with the
least likely prospects for self-determination throughout their
lives--the poor, the disabled, and people of color. Author Dennis
E. Mithaug first presents the logical, philosophical, and
psychological basis for equal opportunity theory and then presents
its social and judicial background. From this foundation he shows
how the optimal prospects principle derived from the theory
decreases the discrepancy between the right and the experience of
self-determination for children and adults with significant
physical, mental, social, and economic disadvantages. Although the
main thrust is theoretical, evidence in support of the theory is
based upon a combination of empirical, historical, and logical
sources. Addressing one of the hottest current topics in American
society and public policy today, Equal Opportunity Theory's
timeliness will make it of great interest to students and
professionals in the fields of sociology, psychology, and political
science. "In Equal Opportunity Theory, Dennis E. Mithaug writes
about the discrepancy between the right to self-determination and
the expression of that right, a problem that is salient to most
Americans with disabilities and others who are less well situated
in our society. This discrepancy manifests itself in what may be
the most 'handicapping' aspect of having a disability, being poor,
or being a member of a minority group that experiences frequent
discrimination--the lack of control over one's life. Equal
Opportunity Theory provides a thoughtful, interdisciplinary
treatment of the complex issues related to this problem. The book
provides an important differentiation of the impact of individual
capacity and opportunity theory as a means to resolve the
discrepancy between the right to and experience of
self-determination for individuals whose personal, social, and
economic circumstances are beyond their control. It also provides a
valuable contribution to the debate concerning how best to empower
and enable all individuals to live self-determined lives."
--Michael L. Wehmeyer, The Arc National Headquarters
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