ABSTRACT

First Published in 1997. In special education we are, at last, in a good position to offer pupils a broad and balanced curriculum which is relevant to their needs and which is based on the same range of provision enjoyed by all pupils. Such a curriculum can only be planned as a cohesive whole; compartmentalizing aspects of the whole curriculum risks seeing one part as having more merit or worth than another. The whole curriculum in ail schools will vary, depending on local needs and opportunities. In special education it is important that we embrace that whole curriculum, using its diversity and opportunity to plan for breadth, balance and relevance. This book makes a significant contribution to the developments in planning for access to the whole curriculum.

chapter 1|14 pages

Enabling Access

part I|132 pages

Perspectives on the National Curriculum

chapter 2|13 pages

English

chapter 3|15 pages

Mathematics

chapter 4|11 pages

Science

chapter 5|11 pages

Physical Education

chapter 6|9 pages

History

chapter 7|10 pages

Geography

chapter 8|12 pages

Art

chapter 9|12 pages

Music

chapter 10|15 pages

Modern Foreign Languages

chapter 11|13 pages

Design and Technology

chapter 12|11 pages

Information Technology

part II|83 pages

Access and Entitlement to the Whole Curriculum

chapter 13|19 pages

Religious Education

chapter 14|10 pages

Coordinating the Whole Curriculum

chapter 15|13 pages

Classroom Processes

chapter 16|11 pages

Assessment

part III|49 pages

The Context for the Whole Curriculum

part IV|13 pages

Conclusion

chapter 23|13 pages

Preparing for Self-advocacy