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Edwards, Carole – British Journal of Special Education, 1985
An administrator describes one London school's experiences in establishing a support service for mainstreamed students. She notes ways to avoid problems with communications, priority questions of supporting the staff or serving the students, staff relationships, the use of link teachers, and preparation to help teachers acquire consultant skills.…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Program Development, Services
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Selfe, Lorna; Gray, Peter – British Journal of Special Education, 1985
An educational psychologist describes achievements and difficulties in instituting a system of special units in ordinary schools as an alternative to special segregated schools for disabled students in rural areas. (CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Program Descriptions, Program Development
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Widlake, Paul – British Journal of Special Education, 1985
The author suggests that the most effective method of serving mainstreamed secondary level disabled students is through a comprehensive support system delivered by direct involvement of special needs teachers in the mainstreamed classes. (CL)
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Program Development
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Bailey, Terence; Hearn, Michael – British Journal of Special Education, 1988
The article describes a pilot program of the Technical and Vocational Education Initiative in the Enfield borough of London which included a special school for delicate children (ages 5 to 16). Discussed are program components, technical vocational options, program implementation, the base room and extended program, program effects, and program…
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Webster, Alec; Jones, Judith – British Journal of Special Education, 1990
A project is described in which a support team collaborated with the science department of a British high school to develop a "whole school" approach to serving children with special educational needs. "New paradigm" research, which aims to involve the subjects of an inquiry as collaborators, was used in the project. (JDD)
Descriptors: Cooperation, Demonstration Programs, Disabilities, Foreign Countries
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Hornby, Garry – British Journal of Special Education, 1988
"Parent to Parent" is a telephone-contact self-help group for families of special needs children. Support parents are recruited and trained to provide counseling to other parents. Professionals lead the training course, which focuses on listening, understanding, and action planning. Parents carry out the support group's administrative…
Descriptors: Committees, Counseling Services, Counseling Techniques, Disabilities
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Galloway, David – British Journal of Special Education, 1988
British educational policy on inservice training has established as a priority the training of classroom teachers to meet special educational needs of their students, using a curriculum-focused, whole-school approach. Three issues require consideration in the policy's implementation: academic organization, social climate of the school, and…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Disabilities, Educational Environment, Educational Policy
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Kempe, Andy – British Journal of Special Education, 1991
This article describes a drama program developed at Reading University (Great Britain) for special education students and teachers at the secondary level, which sought to develop initiative, leadership, ability to think for oneself and adapt to change, and ability to work as a team member. (DB)
Descriptors: Creative Dramatics, Disabilities, Drama, Foreign Countries
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Newman, Kerry; Rose, Richard – British Journal of Special Education, 1990
A program was developed to ensure that teacher and institutional self-evaluation would become an integral part of staff development and curriculum development. A science curriculum module was taught to students with severe learning difficulties and videotaped for use in evaluation and inservice training. (JDD)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Inservice Teacher Education, Integrated Activities
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Lambert, Mike – British Journal of Special Education, 1992
This article describes the development of the Birmingham Institute for Conductive Education in England; its work with students who have motor disorders; its collaborative work with the Peto Institute in Budapest, Hungary; the compatibility of conductive education and England's National Curriculum; and differences between Hungarian and British…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Cultural Context, Cultural Influences, Elementary Secondary Education
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Jacklin, Angela; Lacey, Jeanne – British Journal of Special Education, 1991
This article describes mainstreaming efforts at an East Sussex (England) school serving students with physical disabilities but no major learning impairments. Mainstreaming students into their local schools involved parental support, preparation of mainstream schools, multidisciplinary support networks, and a carefully implemented transfer…
Descriptors: Educational Planning, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Mainstreaming
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Rankin, Philip; Rees-Davies, Neil – British Journal of Special Education, 1996
This article discusses the development and implementation of procedures to comply with the Code of Practice on the Identification and Assessment of Special Educational Needs in a special British school for children with disabilities. The procedures involve observing the student, conducting diagnostic assessments, determining areas and levels of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Disabilities, Disability Identification, Educational Diagnosis
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Carr, Jim; And Others – British Journal of Special Education, 1992
A British school for students with disabilities planned and implemented its curriculum differentiation process by entering the core curriculum into a computer and coding each learning objective, thereby allowing teachers to draw out an individual program for each pupil, varied in length and time scale according to individual needs, and to evaluate…
Descriptors: Computer Managed Instruction, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Uses in Education, Curriculum Development
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Engelbrecht, Petra; Oswald, Marietjie; Forlin, Chris – British Journal of Special Education, 2006
The British "Index for Inclusion" was selected to be used in three primary schools in the Western Cape Province in South Africa in order to develop a South African model to assist in the development of inclusive schools. The "Index for Inclusion" process entails progression through a series of five developmental phases and this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inclusive Schools, Program Implementation, Elementary Education