Centre for Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND)
Centre Meeting
The Centre brings together academics, research staff and doctoral students who are interested in the educational aspects of children, young people and adults with special educational needs and disabilities, and provides a forum for discussion and debate about current theoretical, policy, research and practice issues.
A School of Education research event | |
---|---|
Date | 1 May 2018 |
Time | 12:30 to 14:00 |
Place | Baring Court 217 |
Provider | School of Education |
Intended audience | Academic staff and doctoral students |
Event details
At this meeting we will be discussing the following paper:
Inclusion: Dimensions of inclusion in education
Ane Qvortrupa and Lars Qvortrupb
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION, 2017
The understanding of inclusion in education has transcended the assumption that inclusion is about students with special needs. It concerns the inclusion of all children. With systems theory as a framework, the article argues that in order to handle inclusion as a phenomenon that concerns all children, we need an operational definition of inclusion differentiated according to three dimensions. The first dimension covers different levels of inclusion.
The second dimension concerns different types of social communities in and out of school, from which a child may be included or excluded. The class is one such type of social community, but equally important is membership in the selforganised community of children in the school-yard, the bilateral relationships with other children and/or teachers, etc. The third dimension concerns different degrees of being included in and/or excluded from the different communities. The point is that a child is not either completely included or excluded, but that he/she is included in or excluded from the different communities in different degrees. A comprehensive matrix definition is presented combining the three dimensions, which matches the present understanding of inclusion in education.
******
Typically meetings include: doctoral students present their research ideas and findings; academic staff presenting their research; analysis of interesting papers; and visiting speaker seminars to talk about their research.
If you would like to know more about the centre and join our meetings, please contact the centre convenors Professor Brahm Norwich and Associate Professor Chris Boyle.
Location:
Baring Court 217