Special education provision in Greek mainstream classrooms: teachers’ characteristics and recruitment procedures in parallel support

Author(s):  
Athanasios Koutsoklenis ◽  
Vassilios Papadimitriou
1987 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 399-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merith A. Cosden ◽  
Michael M. Gerber ◽  
Dorothy S. Semmel ◽  
Susan R. Goldman ◽  
Melvyn I. Semmel

An observational study of micro-educational environments (MEE's) and microcomputer use within these environments was conducted across a broad-based, representative sample of special day class, resource room, and mainstream classrooms in Southern California. Mildly handicapped students in special education settings were found to have less variety to their instructional experiences than did either handicapped or nonhandicapped students in the mainstream. That is, students in special education classes evidenced a more dominant pattern of individual, in-classroom, remedial work than did either handicapped or nonhandicapped students in the mainstream. Across all settings, students were highly engaged with the computer, although teachers spent little direct contact time with students during these periods. Microcomputer instruction emerges as a highly motivating vehicle for imparting information, but the effectiveness of these experiences remains to be assessed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 424-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernest M. Bernal

Handicapped children who are also limited-English proficient (LEP) have generally not been served adequately in the schools. Few practitioners are trained to diagnose and treat culturally and linguistically different children. Furthermore, in school systems which have resisted bilingual programs, special education has been enlisted to carry out the ignominious task of segregating LEP children from mainstream classrooms. As a result, a curious placement pattern has occurred whereby some LEP handicapped children are underserved whereas many normals are placed in special education. The traditional reluctance on the part of special education to recruit minority professionals and its separation from regular and bilingual education have stood in the way of progress. Nevertheless, a number of teacher training institutions have received grants to institute rudimentary bilingual special education programs with courses designed to bridge these gaps. Research developments also suggest that bilingual special education may emerge as a viable specialty within special education.


Author(s):  
Sara M. Acevedo ◽  
Emily A. Nusbaum

A brief history of the emergence of the inclusive schools movement demonstrates its reliance on the pathologizing paradigms that are both the foundations and frameworks of traditional special education. Throughout this recent history, the utilization of a positivist approach to research and practice for autistic students, both those who are segregated and those who have access to mainstream classrooms, has maintained a person-fixing ideology. Instead, a neurodiversity framework adopts an integrative approach, drawing on the psychosocial, cultural, and political elements that effectively disrupt the systematic categorization of alternative neurological and cognitive embodiment(s) and expressions as a host of threatening “disorders” that must be dealt with by cure, training, masking, and/or behavioral interventions to be implemented in the classroom. Centering the personal, lived experiences and perspectives of autistic and otherwise neurodivergent activists and scholars affiliated with the U.S. neurodiversity movement offers an emancipatory lens for representing and embodying neurological differences beyond traditional special education’s deficit-based discourses and practices. This emphasis on political advocacy and cultural self-authorship effectively challenges unexamined, universalizing assumptions about whose bodyminds are “educable” and under what auspices “educability” is conceptualized and written into special-education curricula.


2007 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
Pilar Arnaiz Sánchez ◽  
José-Manuel Guirao Lavela ◽  
Carlos F. Garrido Gil

This article presents a research study developed in a Primary School (3 to 12 years) in the county of Murcia (South east of Spain). The study?s aim was to establish the educational response carried out with learners with special education needs in the school. The theoretical framework reviews the course of school integration in Spain and establishes the need to work from a curricular model. The results of this study, which follows the qualitative analysis model by Doyle (1979, 1986, 1987), show the organization structures and tasks that promote participation and integration of students with special education needs in mainstream classrooms.


Author(s):  
Melissa A. Pierce

In countries other than the United States, the study and practice of speech-language pathology is little known or nonexistent. Recognition of professionals in the field is minimal. Speech-language pathologists in countries where speech-language pathology is a widely recognized and respected profession often seek to share their expertise in places where little support is available for individuals with communication disorders. The Peace Corps offers a unique, long-term volunteer opportunity to people with a variety of backgrounds, including speech-language pathologists. Though Peace Corps programs do not specifically focus on speech-language pathology, many are easily adapted to the profession because they support populations of people with disabilities. This article describes how the needs of local children with communication disorders are readily addressed by a Special Education Peace Corps volunteer.


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