ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part 1|93 pages

Inclusive schools

chapter 1|29 pages

Under the walnut tree

The Grove Primary School

chapter 3|16 pages

Planning school development

chapter 4|9 pages

Finding a new place

Changes in role at Ormerod Special School

chapter 5|8 pages

Moving in and moving out

The closure of Etton Pasture Special School

chapter 6|13 pages

Challenging patriarchal culture through equal opportunities

An action research study in a primary school

part 2|26 pages

Integrating services for the under fives

chapter 7|9 pages

Provision for the under fives

Bringing services together

chapter 8|12 pages

Attempting to integrate under fives

Policy in Islington, 1983–8

chapter 9|3 pages

Community play

part 3|36 pages

Life after school

chapter 13|7 pages

A hard journey in the right direction

Experiencing life beyond an institution

part 4|47 pages

The experience of families

chapter 14|12 pages

Fools and heretics

Parents' views of professionals

chapter 15|16 pages

Ruled out or rescued?

A Statement for Balbinder

chapter 16|11 pages

On being a client

Conflicting perspectives on assessment

chapter 17|6 pages

Supportive parents for special children

Working towards partnership in Avon

part 5|68 pages

Integration and disability

chapter 18|4 pages

My story

chapter 19|5 pages

Internalised oppression

How it seems to me

chapter 20|9 pages

The Integration Alliance

Background and manifesto

chapter 22|15 pages

Disability as a social construct

The labelling approach revisited

chapter 23|18 pages

Integration, disability and commitment

A response to Mårten Söder

part 6|69 pages

Aspects of national policy

chapter 26|9 pages

A curriculum for all

A hard task for some

chapter 28|12 pages

Empowering the voluntary sector

The campaign for policy change

part 7|84 pages

Local authority?

chapter 30|14 pages

Voices behind the statistics

Personal perspectives on special education in Cornwall

chapter 33|8 pages

Challenging behaviour support

chapter 34|10 pages

A changing learning support service

chapter 35|11 pages

Working as an educational psychologist

chapter 36|18 pages

Welcome to Newham!

Defining services to parents