HSPLS site
Login
My List - 0
Help
Search
My Account
Databases
HI Newspaper
eBooks/Audiobooks
Learning
PC Reservation
Reading Program
Basic
Advanced
Power
History
Search:
Title Browse
Author Browse
Subject Browse
Best Seller Browse
Music Title Browse
Video/DVD Title Browse
Journal/Newspaper Title Browse
Serial Title Browse
Series Browse (includes Bestseller List)
General Keyword
Title Keyword
Author Keyword
Subject Keyword
Name Keyword
Series Keyword
Score Title Browse
Talking Book Title Browse
Awards Note Browse
Bib No.
Barcode
Refine Search
> You're searching:
HAWAII STATE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM
Item Information
Holdings
Summary
More Content
More by this author
Webster, Rob, 1976- author.
Subjects
Inclusive education -- Great Britain.
Mainstreaming in education -- Great Britain.
Browse Catalog
by author:
Webster, Rob, 1976- author.
by title:
The inclusion illusi...
MARC Display
The inclusion illusion : how children with special educational needs experience mainstream schools / Rob Webster.
by
Webster, Rob, 1976- author.
London : UCL Press, 2022.
Subjects
Inclusive education -- Great Britain.
Mainstreaming in education -- Great Britain.
ISBN:
9781787357006 (paperback)
1787357007 (paperback)
Description:
xiv, 118 pages ; 24 cm
Contents:
Methodology and sample -- The extent of separation and segregation -- The effects of separation and segregation -- Pedagogical diet -- Operational confusion.
Requests:
0
Summary:
"Inclusion conjures images of children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) learning in classes alongside peers in a mainstream school. For pupils in the UK with high-level SEND, who have an Education, Health and Care Plan (formerly a Statement), this implies an everyday educational experience similar to that of their typically-developing classmates. Yet in vital respects, they are worlds apart. Based on the UK's largest observation study of pupils with high-level SEND, The Inclusion Illusion exposes how attendance at a mainstream school is no guarantee of receiving a mainstream education. Observations of nearly 1,500 lessons in English schools show that their everyday experience of school is characterised by separation and segregation. Furthermore, interviews with nearly 500 pupils, parents and school staff reveal the effect of this marginalisation on the quality of their education. The way schools are organised and how classrooms are composed creates a form of 'structural exclusion' that preserves mainstream education for typically-developing pupils and justifies a diluted pedagogical offer for pupils with high-level SEND. Policymakers, not mainstream schools, are indicted over this state of affairs. This book prompts questions about what we think inclusion is and what it looks like. Ultimately, it suggests why a more authentic form of inclusion is needed, and how it might be achieved."-- Publisher.
Copy/Holding information
Location
Collection
Call No.
Status
Library For The Blind and Print Disabled
R -- Reference
R 371.9046 We
Checked In
Add Copy to MyList
Horizon Information Portal 3.0
© 2001-2013
SirsiDynix
All rights reserved.