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Kate Carr-Fanning – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2024
This paper explores the Lay Theories of ADHD of stakeholders (teacher, parent and student) in an Irish context. Academic theories of difference have and continue to evolve, moving from medicalisation, through more socially oriented ideas, to more current trend around neurodivergence. However, inclusion as a process is socially negotiated within…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Parent Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes
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Rose, Richard; Shevlin, Michael – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2020
The provision of support for students with special educational needs in schools is seen as a critical factor in the development of inclusive education. The means through which support is provided, continues to be based upon assumptions that individualized learning approaches may remediate learning difficulties. This paper reports findings from a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Special Needs Students, Inclusion, Children
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Day, Therese; Prunty, Anita; Dupont, Maeve – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2012
As more students with special educational needs attend mainstream schools, it is critical that the role and operation of special schools be examined. This article reports on two case studies, one special school in England and one in Ireland, which formed part of a national review of the role of special schools and special classes in Ireland. Two…
Descriptors: School Role, Special Schools, Special Needs Students, Special Classes
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Kenny, Mairin; Shevlin, Michael; Walsh, Patricia Noonan; McNeela, Eileen – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2005
In the past decade Ireland has witnessed substantial changes in policy and provision for children with general learning difficulties as government policies and legislation increasingly underpin the move towards more inclusive provision. Despite this series of policy initiatives parents of children who experience Down syndrome and general learning…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Parents, Educational Change, Foreign Countries