Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Education |
Editors | George Noblit |
Place of Publication | Oxford UK |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Number of pages | 31 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9780190264093 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2020 |
Abstract
It is important to consider inclusive and effective teacher practices in secondary classrooms as distinct from other schooling levels and settings. Many years of inclusive education reforms have brought about increases in the numbers of students with disabilities who are educated in the regular school system. However, progress has been slower for secondary school students with disabilities, who remain more likely to be segregated from their peers and to receive a poorer-quality education, when compared to their primary school counterparts. This is because many barriers to student inclusion remain entrenched in the structure and organization of secondary schooling systems. These barriers often arise from seeing difficulties in learning and participating through a medical model and thus requiring diagnostic verification and specialist support, instead of seeing student difficulties in learning as arising from a social model of disability, in which student participation and progress are hampered by poor design or inflexibility in teaching practices and a lack of access to support.
A large body of research exists to support the case for using a range of school-wide organization as well as classroom-based practices that effectively overcome these barriers, and provide high-quality and equitable academic and social supports to all students in the secondary school classroom. Those that foster collaboration and effective relationships between professionals and students, and that provide access to support on the basis of need rather than diagnosis, have been found to produce supportive environments in which diversity is valued, equity is maximized for all students, and social and academic outcomes are improved for all students.
A large body of research exists to support the case for using a range of school-wide organization as well as classroom-based practices that effectively overcome these barriers, and provide high-quality and equitable academic and social supports to all students in the secondary school classroom. Those that foster collaboration and effective relationships between professionals and students, and that provide access to support on the basis of need rather than diagnosis, have been found to produce supportive environments in which diversity is valued, equity is maximized for all students, and social and academic outcomes are improved for all students.
Keywords
- Secondary School
- Inclusive Education
- Disability
Research output
- 1 Article
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Multi-tiered systems of support: comparing implementation in primary and secondary schools
De Bruin, K. & Stocker, K., Dec 2021, LDA Bulletin, 53, 3, p. 19-23 5 p.Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article › Other
Open Access