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Today, more than 70 years after its publication, The Great Gatsby
seems as fresh and pertinent to American life as it did in the
1920s. The social, cultural, and historical milieu of the 1920s
reflected in its pages is not so very different from our own. This
interdisciplinary collection of commentary and rich collateral
materials will enrich the reader's understanding of those times and
their influence on Fitzgerald's novel. The authors have included a
wide variety of primary documents that capture the flavor of the
era and its notorious and flamboyant players. Included are
newspaper stories, first person accounts, and congressional
testimony from the scandals of the 1920s. Most of the documents
included in this text are available in no other printed form. A
chapter on the writing of the novel illuminates Fitzgerald's
relationship to the literature of the 1920s. Chapters discuss the
following topics: the scandals of the 1920s, "The Woman Question,"
the rich in the 1920s, and the novel then and now. Each section of
the casebook contains study questions, topics for research papers
and class discussion, and lists of further reading for examining
the themes and issues raised by the novel. This is the ideal
student and teacher companion for understanding the novel in its
historical, social and cultural context.
• Content fully updated to reflect new SEND Review. • Fresh
analysis of evidence-based intervention programmes and the
replacement of school case studies with new ones. • Greater
emphasis on what high quality inclusive classroom teaching and
school/classroom environments look like. • Addition of key
takeaways at end of each chapter, and suggestions on how SLT and
governors can support the SENCO in implementing the ideas . •
Jean Gross is a national expert on special needs, formerly holding
the role of England’s Communication Champion for children and has
had widespread exposure in the media.
First published in 1999. This book offers clear, practical advice
and guidance on how to encourage and support children who have
special educational needs without losing sight of the needs of the
rest of the class. The focus is on children with a wide variety of
special educational needs including emotional and behavioural
difficulties, visual or hearing impairments, speech and language
difficulties and autistic spectrum disorders. By looking closely at
the key features of each difficulty, the authors show how to plan
for these pupils and includes proven strategies.
• Content fully updated to reflect new SEND Review. • Fresh
analysis of evidence-based intervention programmes and the
replacement of school case studies with new ones. • Greater
emphasis on what high quality inclusive classroom teaching and
school/classroom environments look like. • Addition of key
takeaways at end of each chapter, and suggestions on how SLT and
governors can support the SENCO in implementing the ideas . •
Jean Gross is a national expert on special needs, formerly holding
the role of England’s Communication Champion for children and has
had widespread exposure in the media.
Time to Talk provides a powerful and accessible resource for
practitioners working to improve children's language and
communication skills. Showcasing effective approaches in schools
and settings across the country from the early years through
primary and secondary education, it summarises research on what
helps children and young people develop good communication skills,
and highlights the importance of key factors: a place to talk, a
reason to talk and support for talk. This timely second edition has
been fully updated to reflect Pupil Premium, curriculum, assessment
and special needs reforms, and can be used by individual
practitioners as well as supporting a whole-school or setting
approach to spoken language. It includes: whole-class approaches to
developing all children and young people's speaking and listening
skills; 'catch-up' strategies for those with limited language; ways
of differentiating the curriculum for those with difficulties; ways
in which settings and schools can develop an effective partnership
with specialists to help children with more severe needs; models
schools can use to commission their own speech and language therapy
services; examples of good practice in supporting parents/carers to
develop their children's language skills; and answers to
practitioners' most frequently asked questions about speech and
language. Now in full-colour, this practical and engaging book is
for all who are concerned about how to help children and young
people with limited language and communication skills - school
leaders, teachers, early-years practitioners, and the speech and
language therapists they work with.
Providing a practical guide to strategic management in the field
of special educational needs, this text gives the reader a
framework for raising achievement throughout the school.
By focusing on how to manage SEN strategically, rather than on
planning for individual children, it shows how you can make it part
of the overall school improvement process.
The text also provides tools that SENCOs, headteachers and
governors can use to analyze data, set objectives, measure and
evaluate outcomes for SEN just as they do for other areas of the
curriculum. Included are sections on: school self-evaluation;
school development plans; the evidence base for different forms of
provision; developing staff; and how to minimize bureaucracy.
Helpful for OFSTED planning and securing best value, "Special
Educational Needs and School Improvement" also enables schools to
target limited resources where they should have most impact on
promoting inclusion and raising attainment for all.
First published in 1999. This book offers clear, practical advice
and guidance on how to encourage and support children who have
special educational needs without losing sight of the needs of the
rest of the class. The focus is on children with a wide variety of
special educational needs including emotional and behavioural
difficulties, visual or hearing impairments, speech and language
difficulties and autistic spectrum disorders. By looking closely at
the key features of each difficulty, the authors show how to plan
for these pupils and includes proven strategies.
First Published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Time to Talk provides a powerful and accessible resource for
practitioners working to improve children's language and
communication skills. Showcasing effective approaches in schools
and settings across the country from the early years through
primary and secondary education, it summarises research on what
helps children and young people develop good communication skills,
and highlights the importance of key factors: a place to talk, a
reason to talk and support for talk. This timely second edition has
been fully updated to reflect Pupil Premium, curriculum, assessment
and special needs reforms, and can be used by individual
practitioners as well as supporting a whole-school or setting
approach to spoken language. It includes: whole-class approaches to
developing all children and young people's speaking and listening
skills; 'catch-up' strategies for those with limited language; ways
of differentiating the curriculum for those with difficulties; ways
in which settings and schools can develop an effective partnership
with specialists to help children with more severe needs; models
schools can use to commission their own speech and language therapy
services; examples of good practice in supporting parents/carers to
develop their children's language skills; and answers to
practitioners' most frequently asked questions about speech and
language. Now in full-colour, this practical and engaging book is
for all who are concerned about how to help children and young
people with limited language and communication skills - school
leaders, teachers, early-years practitioners, and the speech and
language therapists they work with.
Are you overwhelmed by the amount of paperwork that SEN generates
in your school? Would you like to spend more time actually
improving the quality of teaching and learning for pupils with SEN
or disabilities? If so, this is an essential book for you. Fully
revised and updated for the 2014 SEN Code of Practice, this new
edition contains strategies for reducing the number of individual
education plans and review meetings. Beating Bureaucracy in Special
Educational Needs will help you to use existing systems for target
setting, recording and planning - personalised systems that are
used for all children as part of everyday teaching practices. It
lists the intervention programmes that really work and showcases
the work of four schools that have successfully developed ways of
planning provision, working with parents, and supporting staff
development. Ready-to-use proforma in the book are also available
online, and include a model policy for Ofsted; strategy sheets for
all main types of SEN; provision maps and proformas to help you
plan, monitor and evaluate your provision Beating Bureaucracy in
Special Educational Needs will provide support for school leaders,
SENCOs and anyone undertaking the national SENCO award. A practical
and engaging guide, this new and updated edition shows how to put
responsibility for supporting children with most types of
additional need firmly back where it belongs - with class and
subject teachers. It will help you - in the words of one SENCO -
'get your life back'.
Bringing together the latest research and understanding on
selective mutism, this edited book gives essential information on
the various treatment and therapy options. Experts in the fields of
speech and language therapy, psychology, music therapy education
and communication offer a wide range of professional perspectives
on the condition, while case studies from people with selective
mutism, past sufferers and parents reveal the personal impact. The
book also clarifies what support a person with selective mutism is
likely to need at home, school and in social situations. This
definitive volume on selective mutism will be key reading for
professionals such as speech and language therapists, educational
psychologists, child psychiatrists, child and adolescent mental
health workers, teachers, SENCOs and anyone working with selective
mutism in therapeutic and educational settings, as well as family
members wanting a closer understanding of what selective mutism is
and how they can help.
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