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Showing 1 to 15 of 68 results Save | Export
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Love, Hailey R. – Young Exceptional Children, 2021
Heterotopias are complex spaces characterized by the collision of the real (i.e., physical realm--who and what materials are present) and unreal (i.e., abstract realm--socially created meanings and understandings of the "real"; Foucault, 1986; Topinka, 2010). The early childhood classroom is a heterotopia in that it is a knowledge…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Educational Quality, Students with Disabilities, Classification
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Tracey, Danielle; Craven, Rhonda G.; Yeung, Alexander Seeshing; Tregeagle, Susan; Burnstein, Jodi; Stanley, Helena – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2016
Rural Aboriginal Australians experience disadvantage across a number of significant social and economic outcomes, including educational engagement and achievement. Current debate postulates that educational environments and systems perpetuate this disadvantage. This qualitative study aimed to contribute to the debate by taking a broader ecological…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Learner Engagement, Foreign Countries, Rural Youth
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McConkey, R.; Collins, S. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2010
Background: Past studies have found that people supported in more individualised housing options tend to have levels of community participation and wider social networks than those in other accommodation options. Yet, the contribution of support staff in facilitating social inclusion has received relatively scant attention. Methods: In all 245…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Community Programs, Group Homes, Social Networks
Center for Advancement of Informal Science Education, 2010
Informal science education (ISE) experiences can provide powerful opportunities for people with disabilities to experience and learn about science. When designed to be inclusive, such experiences can lead people with disabilities to feel competent and empowered as science learners, generate excitement and enthusiasm for science, and be equitable…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Science Education, Museums, Community Programs
Blind Childrens Center, 2009
When entering the Blind Childrens Center (BCC), what a person might not realize is that four of the five visually impaired children in a classroom share the same diagnosis of Optic Nerve Hypoplasia (OHN). ONH is the leading cause of blindness and visual impairment in young children. It is important that these children participate in an inclusive…
Descriptors: Visual Impairments, Young Children, Kindergarten, Blindness
Kregel, John – Exceptional Parent, 1985
The development of effective community integration training programs for persons with severe handicaps is examined in terms of the human needs of severely disabled persons, the importance of comprehension and community-oriented training, emphasis on generalization, and consideration of individual preferences and interests. (CL)
Descriptors: Community Programs, Mainstreaming, Program Development, Program Effectiveness
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Kleinert, Harold L.; Miracle, Sally; Sheppard-Jones, Kathy – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2007
We conducted an online statewide survey of teachers of students with moderate and severe intellectual disabilities to determine the extent to which their students were included in school extracurricular and community recreation activities. For the 252 teacher respondents who indicated that their primary caseload consisted of students with…
Descriptors: Severe Mental Retardation, Moderate Mental Retardation, Extracurricular Activities, Mainstreaming
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Tsao, Ling-Ling; Odom, Samuel L.; Buysse, Virginia; Skinner, Marti; West, Tracy; Vitztum-Komanecki, Joann – Exceptionality, 2008
The purpose of this study was to examine the social participation of young children with disabilities in inclusive preschool programs. One hundred forty-three preschool-aged children with disabilities were observed in classrooms representing four organizational contexts: community-based, Head Start, public school, and blended. Children's and…
Descriptors: Social Behavior, Disadvantaged Youth, Disabilities, Interaction
Montgomery County Association for Retarded Citizens, Rockville, MD. – 1984
The fact sheet considers the importance of recreation and leisure time activities for people with mental retardation. A case is made for mainstreamed services, and suggestions are offered for families seeking to procure successful mainstreamed experiences in community recreational programs. Among suggestions are adapting family games to the…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Community Programs, Leisure Time, Mainstreaming
Striefel, Sebastian; And Others – 1987
The paper is a product of the 3-year project, "Functional Mainstreaming for Success," designed to develop a model for instructional mainstreaming of handicapped children (3-6 years old) in community settings. The paper reviews the literature defining "mainstreaming," notes that mainstreaming is not the wholesale return of exceptional students from…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Definitions, Disabilities, Mainstreaming
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Momm, Willi; Koenig, Andreas – International Labour Review, 1989
Community-based rehabilitation for disabled people has proved to have serious shortcomings, especially in terms of vocational training. The broader concept of community integration programs involves disabled people and local institutions in training and employment efforts to integrate the disabled into normal community life. (SK)
Descriptors: Community Programs, Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Job Training
Syracuse Univ., NY. – 1979
The document cites research to support the viewpoint that community integration is preferable to institutions for the severely and profoundly mentally retarded. Refuted are such arguments against deinstitutionalization as that retarded people should be segregated, that institutions are a more efficient and less expensive way to provide services,…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Deinstitutionalization (of Disabled), Institutionalized Persons, Literature Reviews
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Ferguson, Philip M. – Social Policy, 1987
Discusses how reform efforts have historically followed a pattern of de facto exclusion of people who are severely retarded. Examines "social constructivism" as a guiding philosophy of current disability forms and presents "critical theory" as alternative perspective for disability studies. (PS)
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Community Programs, Deinstitutionalization (of Disabled), Exceptional Persons
Crapps, John M.; And Others – Education and Training of the Mentally Retarded, 1985
Fifteen mentally retarded adults living in group home and intermediate group residences (IGR) were interviewed. All participants spent majority of their time in their homes. Men played a more active role in their integration than did women. IGR men and women went less often into the community and rarely (IGR men) or never (IGR women) went out…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Patterns, Community Programs, Group Homes
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Jansma, Paul; Krasnavage, Paul – Physical Educator, 1982
A model for a community youth football program that includes disabled youth identifies five divisions of restriction based on: the amount of physical contact; level of activity strenuousness; emphasis on competition and winning; and special accommodations required. Handicapped youth football programs emphasize skill development and provide…
Descriptors: Adapted Physical Education, Athletes, Community Programs, Competition
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