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Despite the efforts that have been made to bring about improvements
in schools, some children and young people remain marginal by
current arrangements. The development of more inclusive schools
remains one of the biggest challenges facing education systems
throughout the world. However, inclusion remains a complex and
controversial issue, and the development of inclusive practices in
schools is not well understood.
Despite the efforts that have been made to bring about improvements
in schools, some children and young people remain marginal by
current arrangements. The development of more inclusive schools
remains one of the biggest challenges facing education systems
throughout the world. However, inclusion remains a complex and
controversial issue, and the development of inclusive practices in
schools is not well understood.
First published in 1981. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor and Francis, an informa company.
The emphasis in this book shifts to the coordination of practice into schools, regional and national policies and the power and interest groups concerned with educational difficulties and disability. In the opening section the authors review the location of power in the systems; the impact of Local Management of Schools, case studies of Union policy, the National Curriculum Council and voluntary societies. They then look at one threatened element of the power structure - the local education authorities. They examine the features of local authority policy and attempt to systematise local policy. The experience of families is examined in their relationships with professionals, particularly during the preparation of Statements of Special Educational Need. This is followed by sections on services for under-fives, integrating education and the authors provide examples of changing school policies and the practices that have arisen from them; supporting the learning of all pupils in primary and secondary schools, changing the role of special schools, ensuring that girls and boys are provided with equal opportunities, writing a development plan and the experience of a teacher with a disability. They then examine policies and practices in education after school and finish with theories of integration and disability.
They can make a start by recognising and accepting difference in their students and by providing curricula that are accessible to all. This volume portrays attempts to alleviate difficlties in learning across the curriculum, in history, mathematics, poetry and science, and explores ways of supporting children with disabilities. It examines how approaches to reducing difficulties have changed in the last decade, looking at the experience of children and young people under pressure: children who are bullied; young people affected by HIV and AIDS; youth `trainees' and children in `care'. There is a final section on basic methods of research into educational practice.
"Policies for Diversity in Education" is the second volume in the
"Learning for All" series published by Routledge. The emphasis here
is on the coordination of practice in schools, regional and
national policies, and the power and interest groups concerned with
educational difficulties and disabilities. Beginning with a review
of the location of power in the systems--including government
bodies, voluntary societies, and the unions--it moves to focus on
one threatened element of that power structure, the local education
authority. Using case material, "Policies for Diversity in
Education," explores the experience of families in their
relationships with professionals, and looks at examples of changing
school policies and the practices that have arisen from them. The
final sections offer an important forum for discussion on policies
and practices in education after school, and on theories of
integration and disability.
"Learning for All" is a series of two books which describe and
promote an education system that is responsive to the diversity of
all students, irrespective of their gender, race, background, level
of attainment, abilities or disabilities. The books focus on the
education of children and young people who experience difficulties
in learning or who have disabilities. They emphasize the inclusion
and participation of pupils within a comprehensive system of
British primary and secondary schools, in attaining an education
system that recognizes, accepts, and provides for diversity.
Contains a collection of brief case studies of children, families, professionals, curricula and schools which illustrate and illuminate contemporary methods in special education.
In this comparative study, an international team of researchers from eight countries develop case-studies which explore the processes of inclusion and exclusion within a school or group of schools in a local and national context. The book's topics include classroom observation and students' experiences of the school day, and it contains interviews with staff, students, parents and school governors. Through a juxtaposition of the case-studies and commentaries on them, differences of perspective within and between countries are revealed and analyzed. The book draws attention to the problems of translation of practice across cultures. The editors start from an assumption of diversity of perspective which, like the diversity of students within schools, can be viewed as problematic or as a resource to be recognized and celebrated.
On 1 June 1939 His Majesty's Submarine Thetis sank in Liverpool Bay while on her diving trials. Her loss is still the worst peacetime submarine disaster the Royal Navy has yet faced when ninety-nine men drowned or slowly suffocated during their last fifty hours of life. The disaster became an international media event, mainly because the trapped souls aboard were so near to being saved after they managed to raise her stern about 18ft above sea level. Still the Royal Navy-led rescue operation failed to find the submarine for many hours, only to rescue four of all those trapped. Very little is known about what actually happened, as the only comprehensive book written on the subject was published in 1958. Many years have now passed since the Thetis and her men died, for which no one was held to be ultimately accountable. However, a great deal of unpublished information has come to light in archives throughout the United Kingdom and beyond. After four years of painstaking research Thetis; The Slow Death of a Submarine explores in minute detail a more rounded picture of what really happened before, during and after her tragic loss. In doing so Tony Booth's book also takes a fresh look at culpability and explores some of the alleged conspiracy theories that surrounded her demise. The result is the first definitive account what happened to HMS Thetis - and her men - a fitting tribute, as the seventieth anniversary of her loss will be on 1 June 2009.
Artist Tony Both worked in Liverpool during the early 1960s, just around the corner from The Cavern Club and close to the Beatles' manager Brian Epstein's office in Whitechapel. Tony's work caught Epstein's eye, and he would go on to produce posters, printed leaflets and a wide variety of publicity and display materials for Epstein's artists, most notably for a young four-piece beat combo called the Beatles. Alongside his work for Epstein, Tony produced hand-painted gig posters for many promoters, including Sam Leach, Allan Williams and The Cavern Club's DJ Bob Wooler, who also promoted many of the big events. Tony's original posters now fetch a considerable sum of money, and The Beatles in Posters features these as well as exact replicas of those that have been lost to time. This is the first book of its type and is a must-buy for all fans of the Fab Four and the Merseybeat scene.
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