Social Participation of Students with Special Educational Needs in Mainstream Education
Coordonnateurs : Schwab Susanne, Nel Mirna, Hellmich Frank
This book provides deep insight into the social situation of students with different kinds of special needs in various European countries. Research findings concerning students? attitudes towards peers with disabilities, and teachers? feedback on students? social behaviour, are also presented.
Full inclusion of students with special educational needs in mainstream education requires equity in each student?s chances for academic and social-emotional development, and their participation in society. In the context of inclusive education, it is important to take students? social participation into consideration. Are students with special educational needs (SEN) accepted by their peers? Do they interact with their peers during breaks and classes? Do they have friends, or do they feel lonely in their class? This book seeks to answer such questions, seeing social participation as a crucial ingredient, as well as an outcome, of inclusive education. This topic is critical because many previous studies show students with SEN having a high risk of social exclusion.
This volume will be of interest to everyone studying special needs education, especially those concerned with future improvement of social participation for all students. This book was originally published as a special issue of the European Journal of Special Needs Education.
Chapter 1 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
Introduction – Social participation of students with special educational needs 1. Student voices on social exclusion in general primary schools 2. School segregation and social participation: the case of Norwegian children with physical disabilities 3. The quality of experience of students with and without special educational needs in everyday life and when relating to peers 4. Social participation and friendship quality of students with special educational needs in regular Greek primary schools 5. Does social exclusion by classmates lead to behaviour problems and learning difficulties or vice versa? A cross-lagged panel analysis 6. The relationship between class attitudes towards peers with a disability and peer acceptance, friendships and peer interactions of students with a disability in regular secondary schools 7. The impact of social referencing on social acceptance of children with disabilities and migrant background: an experimental study in primary school settings
Susanne Schwab is Full Professor at the Centre for Teacher Education at the University of Vienna, Austria. As of March 2017, she has also held the position of Extraordinary Professor in the Optentia Research Focus Area at North-West University, South Africa. Her research specifically focusses on inclusive education, as well as teacher education and training.
Mirna Nel is a Full Professor in the Optentia Research Focus Area at North-West University, South Africa. Her research interests include the role of the teacher in inclusive education, as well as teacher education for inclusion.
Frank Hellmich is Full Professor for Primary School Education at the Institute of Educational Research at Paderborn University, Germany. His research interests are inclusive education in primary schools, and primary school teachers’ education and training.
Date de parution : 03-2021
17.4x24.6 cm
Date de parution : 06-2019
17.4x24.6 cm
Thème de Social Participation of Students with Special... :
Mots-clés :
Integrated Behavioral Model; Forced Choice Likert Scale; Separated General Linear Model; Parental Social Background; TD Peer; Vice Versa; Cross-lagged Panel Model; Spina Bifida; Assess Peer Acceptance; European Journal of Special Needs Education; Cross-lagged Panel Analysis; Social participation; Migration Background; Peer acceptance; Autism Spectrum Disorder; Inclusive education; Children’s Social Participation; Social; emotional and behavioural difficulties; SRBP; Disability; Gend Er; Special educational needs; Watch Tv Show; mainstream education; ICD-10 Code; Organised Leisure Activities; students' attitudes; Social Self-concept; Cross-lagged Structural Equation Model; Segregated Special Education; Injunctive Norms; Teacher Feedback; Friendship Quality