Including Children and Young People with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities in Learning and Life: How Far Have We Come Since the Warnock Enquiry – and Where Do We Go Next?
Editat de Rob Websteren Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 ian 2019
Offering historical perspectives and drawing on professional and personal experiences, high-profile contributors, including practitioners, researchers, campaigners and parents, reflect on the approaches taken during the Warnock Enquiry and consider how successfully recommendations have been implemented. Reviewing conceptional and practical territory covered by the Warnock committee, and assessing the current state of the inclusion and education of young people with SEND in the UK, the text sets out broad, evidence-based principles for rethinking inclusive practice and explores topics including:
- the purposes, contribution and impacts of the Warnock Enquiry
- rights-based approaches to the education of children with SEND
- past and present dialogue between mainstream and specialist settings
- challenges faced by parents of children with SEND
- implications of the Enquiry for initial teacher training
- perceptions of SEND in the media
- the relevance of the Enquiry to policy and practice in the years ahead.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138348868
ISBN-10: 1138348864
Pagini: 122
Ilustrații: 1 Line drawings, black and white
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138348864
Pagini: 122
Ilustrații: 1 Line drawings, black and white
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate, Professional, and UndergraduateCuprins
Acknowledgements Foreword Contributor biographies Editor’s introduction 1. Looking back: A brief history of the Warnock Enquiry 2. Interview with Baroness Mary Warnock 3. Going to school in an ambulance 4. Recognising paradigm shifts: lessons from the Warnock Report 5. Including children and young people with complex needs in learning and life 6. Pre-service teacher training and special educational needs in England, 1978–2018: looking back and moving forward? 7. The rights of the child with special educational needs 8. ‘Equality, belonging, value, humanity’ 9. The chapter that nearly didn’t get written 10. Normalising difference: resetting perceptions of SEND in the media 11. The debate continues... 12. Swimming against the tide 13. Special educational needs and the power of the arts 14. Moving special education on: teaching, conversation and love 15. The case for a broader policy framework for special needs and inclusive education: where we could go next 16. Looking forward: using the Warnock Report to chart a way forward Index
Recenzii
Perfectly timed, this book enables the contributors and the readers to reflect on both the journey and current state of education for children with SEND. Informative, challenging, heart-warming and heart-breaking, this is a diverse anthology for parents and educators alike. I particularly enjoyed the nuanced personal tales, the essential rage, and complete commitment to a vision where all children have their needs met unconditionally. The interview with Baroness Warnock herself provides a reflective insight to one of the seminal pieces of educational parliamentary work of our time.
Keziah Featherstone, Head of School, Q3 Academy Tipton, UK
This book identifies significant challenges that must be overcome to ensure every child with SEND is served well by the English education system. It puts forward a pragmatic and clear case outlining how the situation might be improved, exploring areas including accountability and inclusion, teacher training and supply, the availability of school places, and attitudes toward children with SEND. This book is essential reading for professionals, parents and policymakers interested in practical ideas to improve the educational experience for children with SEND.
Anne Heavey, National Director, Whole School SEND, UK
This is a powerful and important publication in which Rob Webster has brought together a diverse range of some of the most important voices in education today. This book provides us with a chastening reminder of the days when the state wrote children off as ‘mentally defective’ and sent them to schools for the ‘educationally sub-normal’. We have come a long way since those dark days, but the real power of this book is that it makes it clear how far we still have to go.
Jarlath O'Brien, Director for Schools, The Eden Academy, UK
This book is a call to arms and deserves attention. It builds on the educational and moral rationale, and picks up on the strong economic case for inclusion too. Rob Webster has brought a new lens to the inclusion debate, helping us all to think forward, rather than backwards.
Margaret Mulholland, Director of Development and Research, Swiss Cottage School, Development and Research Centre, UK
This book is ideal for those working in initial teacher education, whether student teachers, tutors or mentors. It will help readers gain great insights into the past, present and potential future of the complex policy environment for SEND, and the very real practical implications arising from this for pupils, teachers and parents. Importantly, it also offers practical advice and sensible ways forward.
Professor Samantha Twiselton OBE, Director of Sheffield Institute of Education, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Keziah Featherstone, Head of School, Q3 Academy Tipton, UK
This book identifies significant challenges that must be overcome to ensure every child with SEND is served well by the English education system. It puts forward a pragmatic and clear case outlining how the situation might be improved, exploring areas including accountability and inclusion, teacher training and supply, the availability of school places, and attitudes toward children with SEND. This book is essential reading for professionals, parents and policymakers interested in practical ideas to improve the educational experience for children with SEND.
Anne Heavey, National Director, Whole School SEND, UK
This is a powerful and important publication in which Rob Webster has brought together a diverse range of some of the most important voices in education today. This book provides us with a chastening reminder of the days when the state wrote children off as ‘mentally defective’ and sent them to schools for the ‘educationally sub-normal’. We have come a long way since those dark days, but the real power of this book is that it makes it clear how far we still have to go.
Jarlath O'Brien, Director for Schools, The Eden Academy, UK
This book is a call to arms and deserves attention. It builds on the educational and moral rationale, and picks up on the strong economic case for inclusion too. Rob Webster has brought a new lens to the inclusion debate, helping us all to think forward, rather than backwards.
Margaret Mulholland, Director of Development and Research, Swiss Cottage School, Development and Research Centre, UK
This book is ideal for those working in initial teacher education, whether student teachers, tutors or mentors. It will help readers gain great insights into the past, present and potential future of the complex policy environment for SEND, and the very real practical implications arising from this for pupils, teachers and parents. Importantly, it also offers practical advice and sensible ways forward.
Professor Samantha Twiselton OBE, Director of Sheffield Institute of Education, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Notă biografică
Rob Webster is Associate Professor at the Centre for Inclusive Education, UCL Institute of Education, UK.
Descriere
Marking the 40th anniversary of the Warnock Enquiry (1978) into special education in the UK and capturing coverage of a public debate on SEND hosted by the UCL Institue of Education (2018), this volume explores the legacy of the Enquiry, considering how it has impacted on policy and practice, and how it will continue to do so.