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A case study: climate, best practices, administrative support, and staff attitudes in a middle school inclusion programBoyd, Kimberly Daniel 01 April 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Challenges facing educators’ in the inclusion of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disordered (ADHD) learners in the mainstream classroomHariparsad, Shireen D. January 2010 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree MASTERS IN EDUCATION In the Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education of the Faculty of Education at the University of Zululand, 2010. / The aim of this study was to investigate the challenges facing educators’
in the inclusion of ADHD learners in the mainstream classroom.
As an introduction to the study the challenges faced by educators’ in the
inclusion of ADHD learners in mainstream classes were reviewed by
means of a study of available and relevant literature. Educators are
people who make learning and teaching possible and their own
challenges in what is happening in the classroom are of crucial
importance. Research done in South Africa on challenges faced by
educators’ in inclusive education indicated that educators in mainstream
classrooms generally express negative attitudes to mainstreaming policies
and thus finds himself with many challenges. In the new education
dispensation educators in mainstream classrooms have to accommodate
learners with impairments, such as the ADHD child. Inclusion makes
additional demands on educators because of the special educational
needs of learners with impairments. The challenges facing educators in
inclusion and their efficacy in meeting the special needs of learners with
impairments play a determining role in the successful implementation of
an inclusive education policy.
For the purpose of the empirical investigation a self-structured
questionnaire was utilized. An analysis was done of 110 questionnaires
completed by primary school educators from the Mafukezela Gandhi district on the North Coast of KwaZulu Natal. The data was processed
and interpreted by means of descriptive statistics.
Essentially the following were the main findings from the empirical study:
Educators lack the necessary knowledge, skills, training and experience
of learners with special educational needs.
Educators have difficulty in identifying ADHD learners.
Educators needed to change their teaching methods to accommodate
learners with diverse educational needs.
The study concludes with a summary and findings from the literature study
and descriptive statistics. Based on these findings the following
recommendations were made:
The development of curricula, institutions and methods of assessments
must include a variety of strategies to accommodate learners with special
educational needs, such as ADHD learners.
The basic training of educators must include compulsory courses such as
orthopedagogics that will enable them to cope with the demands for
inclusion of learners with special educational needs.
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Die rol van die onderwyser met betrekking tot die implementering van inklusiewe onderwys : 'n opvoedkundig sielkundige perspektief / The role of the educator in respect to the implementation of inclusive education : an educational psychological perspectiveEngelbrecht, Jurita 30 November 2005 (has links)
Text in Afrikaans / Presently, within the South African Educational system. there is an indinatlon
towards a single indusive educational system. Since the implementation of such
a system lodges with the educator within the classroom. factors that have a
bearing on the role of the educator. seen from an educational psychological
perspective in conjunction with a literature study as well as a quantitative
research are hereby researched. Attention is also devoted to the setting of
guidelines by the educational psychologist for the educator in respect of the
implementation of this given concept. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Voorligting)
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A case study of inclusive education in Hong KongLee, Ka-yin, Wendy, 李嘉賢 January 2013 (has links)
This paper reports a case study conducted at a local Government-aided primary school in Hong Kong to explore the teaching and learning of three students with special educational needs (SEN). The research aims to investigate the perceptions of the principal, teachers, social workers, students and parents on inclusive education, and look at the practicability and feasibility of the school inclusive policy. Results indicated that although the school embraces the inclusive ideology in principle, the interviewees expressed serious reservation on the Government promoted whole school integration approach to include all students with special educational needs. The study on one hand examined the government and school policy and practice on inclusion, and on the other hand identified the difficulties and obstacles encountered by the school, some of which were regarded as fundamental problems that require changes in the educational system. The paper ends with recommendations for further research that is worth exploring in order to achieve a true and effective inclusive educational system in the Hong Kong landscape.
Research methodology is qualitative. Interviews were conducted with a number of school staff and two parents of the SEN students. The interviews focused on how school key personnel and teachers viewed their roles, contributions, and difficulties in implementing inclusive education, and how parents view the studies and growth of their children at the case school. A 10-week observations aimed at observing how the three students under the case study adapted, learnt and grew in a mainstream school environment. Through inductive reasoning, data collected was subsequently grouped into patterns and regularities. There are two recurrent themes brought up at the study. First, the success of inclusive education rests largely and predominately on the ‘heart and soul’ – the attitudes and values of the teachers in educating the SEN students; and second, the school does not have the right conditions, in particular, sufficient resources to provide a true inclusive environment for the SEN students with intensive support needs, where the system must change to adapt to the children’s needs and not the vice versa.
The general conclusion developed is that the case school, in face of the increasing number of SEN students, is forced to do more with less under the current government inclusive policy; and the SEN students themselves are forced to squeeze in the shoes of the regular students in a mainstream school. Without a system change, there is only partial inclusion at the mainstream school, and the SEN students must adapt to the regular classroom mode and curriculum, or fail. / published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
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The experience of educators of inclusive education in a primary school06 June 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this research study was to explore and describe the experience of primary school educators of inclusive education. Educators experience inclusive education with dissimilar attitudes and perceptions. Educators constantly have to cope with large numbers of learners in the classroom, an inflexible curriculum and a lot of administration work. All these things make implementation of inclusive education difficult. I perceive that there is a need to re-evaluate the existing curriculum and come up with new teaching methods to assist the educators to cope with their dilemma. The objectives of this study were to explore and describe the experience of educators in a primary school of inclusive education and to describe guidelines to assist educators to facilitate a positive experience of inclusive education. The study was qualitative, explorative, descriptive and contextual in approach and it therefore became necessary to use phenomenological semi-structured interviews with educators involved in inclusive education. Before the interviews, trust was build through a written request of permission to the principal of the school concerned to conduct the research study. The participating educators were also informed of what the research is all about before the main interview. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews focusing on the experience of primary school educators of inclusive education. Data were analysed utilising Tesch’s (Cresswell 2004:192) method of open coding. Trustworthiness was ensured throughout the study by applying Guba’s approach (Lincoln and Guba 1995:15) including the service of an independent coder. Results were recontextualised within the literature. Most educators view inclusive education as beneficial to the educators, the parents, the school and the learners as a whole; “a tool to make every learner a winner.” There are challenges that make inclusive education difficult to implement and are voiced by educators through a feeling of disempowerment. Support systems presently implemented by educators are met with varying opinions about the efficiency in inclusive education. There is an increased need for support systems for educators involved in inclusive education. Guidelines to assist educators to facilitate a positive experience of inclusive education were developed based on the above theme. / Prof. C.P.H. Myburgh Prof. M. Poggenpoel
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Imagining inclusive schooling : an ethnographic inquiry into disabled children's learning and participation in regular schools in ShanghaiWang, Yuchen January 2016 (has links)
In Mainland China, a national education policy called ‘Learning in Regular Classrooms’ (LRC) has been implemented for over 25 years to support the inclusion of disabled children in regular schools. Although the LRC policy framework has been gradually adapted in response to the global movement for inclusive education, little is known about what is happening in classrooms and schools. In particular, disabled children’s views and experiences of their school lives remain unknown. Drawing on perspectives from inclusive education, pupil voice, disability studies and childhood studies, this research is driven by a theoretical stance that positions disabled children as active and competent social actors whose voices should be valued and heard. This exploratory inquiry adopted an ethnographic approach. I conducted the fieldwork in 4 state primary schools in Shanghai, with 11 disabled children (designated as LRC pupils and labelled as having Learning Difficulties), 10 class teachers and 3 resource teachers. The Framework for Participation (Florian & Black-Hawkins, 2011) was used to inform data collection and analysis. Multiple methods were utilised including participant observation, interviews and participatory activities. Rich, in-depth and contextual data were collected and thematically analysed. This research highlights several key findings. First, the necessity of listening to pupil voice is reaffirmed. Children’s views of schooling revealed hidden knowledge that had been unknown to teachers. The child participants were sensitive, observant and reflective, exercising their agency to negotiate the circumstances in which they were living. They offered informative comments on school practice and shared aspirations for improvement. Second, it was found that the meaning of inclusive education failed to be addressed in everyday schooling process, although there had been rhetorical change in LRC policy, and its implementation helped to secure disabled children’s access to regular schools. Disabled children were still facing forms of marginalisation and exclusion, such as limited participation in decision-making, restricted opportunities to access extra-curricular activities and spaces, lack of support for academic learning, and negative experiences of bullying from peers. The existing special educational provision such as the ‘resource classroom’ was found to interrupt children’s sense of togetherness and generate negative labelling effects for them. Third, facilitators of and barriers to disabled children’s learning and participation were identified. The exclusionary process affecting disabled children was strongly fortified by the introduction of special educational thinking and practice, which not only marked out these children as incompetent and in need of protection, but also underrated the existing inclusive practice in regular classrooms. The process was further reinforced by the charitable model of disability in Confucian society and the prevailing competitive and performative school culture. Nevertheless, teachers could play important roles in negotiating all pupils’ learning and participation. Among the insights gained into teachers’ practice, a connection between teachers’ attentiveness to children’s worlds and their demonstration of inclusive practice was noticed, on the basis of which I discussed the implications of pupil voice for developing inclusive practice, and explored a working model for moving towards inclusive education in China with pupil voice as a core starting point. In China, there is still a long way to go before realising all children’s learning and participation. This research calls for a paradigm shift within the country to encourage new ways of thinking and researching, in which children must be seen as essential partners in the process of transforming and imagining possibilities for inclusive education.
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Secondary school inclusion for students with moderate to severe disabilities in Victoria, AustraliaLoreman, Timothy J. (Timothy John), 1970- January 2000 (has links)
Abstract not available
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Inclusive education for children with disabilities in Fiji: Teacher perspectives and attitudesDaveta, Mereoni Laveti January 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to examine teacher perspectives and attitudes on inclusive education for children with disabilities in Fiji. Teachers' perspectives and attitudes are crucial in providing insights that could help improve education and services for children with disabilities in regular schools in Fiji. A qualitative approach using semi structured interviews was selected as the methodology for this research. Nine teachers from nine different schools in Suva, the capital city of Fiji, participated in this research. The nine participants were selected from three different school settings. Three of the participants were from special schools, three were from primary schools and three were from secondary schools. Data collected showed that teachers support inclusive education, however, they had reservations on the inclusion of students with severe disabilities. Several factors were identified to influence teachers' attitudes towards inclusion. The most common factors were severity of disability that the students had, inadequate training of teachers on teaching students with disabilities, inadequate government funding, lack of specialised resource personnel and lack of appropriate equipment and resources to support students and teachers in the teaching learning process. Limited commitment from the Ministry of Education and limited participation and consultation of teachers on policy and curriculum design were also identified as contributing factors for non inclusion of students with disabilities in regular schools. Teachers need to change their perspectives and attitudes and schools need to be welcoming and prepared to accept all students with disabilities into the general education system in Fiji.
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Mike Rose : composing a reading of inclusionJameson, Sara 28 April 2004 (has links)
Mike Rose researcher, professor, scholar, and author of numerous articles
and books including the literacy memoir - Lives on the Boundary - has been active in
the field of education and composition for over 30 years. This thesis looks back at the
development of the discipline of composition studies to suggest that Rose has played
an important role in this process, particularly with his significant early work on
cognitive writing process research and his later attention to the social-cognitive
aspects of learning. This thesis contributes to the scholarly conversation on Rose by
composing a reading of Rose's oeuvre on the theme of inclusion. Three chapters
analyze Rose's various presentations of inclusion in his scholarly articles and in Lives
on the Boundary. These instances of inclusion reveal his commitment to helping
students succeed - particularly students who might be marginalized due to race,
gender, ethnicity or socioeconomic class. In suggesting this way of reading Rose's
oeuvre, this thesis encourages further consideration of his many contributions to the
field of rhetoric and composition. The appendix includes an extended annotated
bibliography. / Graduation date: 2004
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"Just something I can do!" : Inclusive education and school experience of disabled children in Scotland, Sweden and Iceland.Hreidarsdóttir, Gudny Maria January 2012 (has links)
Abstract This research is about inclusive education in three classes and the experience of a disabled child in the class. The aim was to find out what the factors were that created an inclusive/exclusive class from the perspective of the class teacher and the disabled child. For this I visited one class in Dundee in Scotland, one class in Reykjavik in Iceland and one class in a small community in Värmland in Sweden. The approach used to get this information were qualitative methods in the tradition of an ethnographic case study because the focus was on the culture in three different classes. I used ethnography as a way to go about conducting the research and collected data with participant observation and deep interviews in all three schools. Qualitative thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. The results indicate that it is complicated to say precisely what inclusive education is. I used the models of disability and frames of inclusive education developed from the literature to put a focus on the results of the data. And these paradigms are on three levels; the child level, the teachers or class level and the school authorities’ or policy level. A matrix was developed to better have an overview of the results. From the three cases one can presume that one of the factors that enhance inclusive education is the teachers thinking and ideology about inclusive education and thereby are the responsible people in a disabled child education and schooling. Both in the case of Scotland and Iceland the class teacher did not take this responsibility and that resulted as a barrier for these disabled children´s participation in class. Another result is about the understanding significant persons had regarding these disabled children´s communication and attempts to connect or relate to others in the everyday life at school. When their impairment regarding how they communicate and relate to others was regarded this promoted their participation and inclusive education.
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