scholarly journals Therapeutic support for young people with learning difficulties: what enables effective practice?

Author(s):  
Samantha Attwood ◽  
Cathy Atkinson
2020 ◽  
pp. 221-234
Author(s):  
Sonia Wawrzyniak

Wawrzyniak Sonia, Tutoring, mentoring i coaching w edukacji osób z trudnościami w uczeniu się [Tutoring, Mentoring and Coaching in the Education of People with Learning Difficulties]. Studia Edukacyjne nr 56, 2020, Poznań 2020, pp. 221-234. Adam Mickiewicz University Press. ISSN 1233-6688. DOI: 10.14746/se.2020.56.12The article presents the possibilities it creates using pedagogical innovations such as tutoring, mentoringand coaching supporting the traditional model of education at work with students with school difficulties. Problems withfinding your own path for children and youth, coping skills in a dynamically changing reality,in consumer times with many difficult situations is often undertaken on the basis of school practice and and scientific research. Young people are expected to have knowledge and skills flexible, mobility in various spheres of life because the change is inscribed in the surrounding reality. Important task of modern school and educational institutions is making young people aware of challenges, that stand before them and prepare them to the right life, educational and professional choices in accordance with their capabilities andrequirements of the labor market.


Youth Justice ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 309-327
Author(s):  
Sarah Brooks-Wilson

This article rethinks youth justice policy and practice in terms of movement, challenging its dominant, static framing. Holistic services have a high travel burden, with absence extremely problematic for effective practice. Yet children’s youth justice journeys and their effects currently remain invisible. Evidence from 28 young people and 33 practitioners will demonstrate the urgent need to develop policies that do not punish children who are poorly placed to travel. The compulsory catapulting of ‘kinetic underclass’ members around locality settings suggests the need for policy innovation, with new ‘minimum standards’ providing effective, child-centred opportunities through comprehensive yet malleable minimum entitlements.


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