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Journal articles on the topic 'Physically disabled pupils'

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1

BAILEY, JOHN F. "Physically disabled pupils in mainstream schools." Children & Society 2, no. 2 (2007): 117–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1099-0860.1988.tb00330.x.

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2

Gibb, C. McD D., and R. P. Flavahan. "What distinguishes integrated and segregated physically disabled pupils?" Educational Research 29, no. 1 (1987): 3–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0013188870290101.

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3

Ashmead, Patricia, Frank J. O'Hagan, Elizabeth J. A. Sandys, and W. Ian Swanson. "Personal, Social and Educational Adjustments of Physically Disabled Pupils in Ordinary Schools." Exceptional Child 32, no. 3 (1985): 201–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0156655850320308.

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I.AL-Obaidi, Dr Afraa, and Dr Ashwaq S.j.lammoza. "Belonging to the group and its relationship to the self’s’ ability to challenge life’s pressures of students of special needs and their Normal peers: Comparative Study." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 224, no. 3 (2018): 21–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v224i3.290.

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The study aims to link the measure the students with special needs (physically disabled only) the students of sixth grade and ordinary peers and measuring the self's ability to defy the pressures of life with students with special needs students in sixth grade and ordinary peers and learn about the relationship between the membership and the ability of self-challenge stress among students with special needs and to identify the relationship between the membership and the ability of the self to defy the pressures of life among ordinary students . research sample of 46 pupils with special needs a
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Ahmed, Salawu, Nuhu Ateiza Isiaka, and Isah Alhaji Tauheed. "Effectiveness of Inclusive Design for Children with Disabilities in Nigerian Education Buildings." International Journal of Architecture and Urbanism 8, no. 1 (2024): 17–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.32734/ijau.v8i1.15532.

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The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) report that twenty million Nigerian children lack access to basic school education. This is due to inadequate support for children with unique educational needs and impairments in primary school buildings. This study aims to assess how inclusive design ideas have been applied in Abuja public primary school buildings to accommodate children with unusual academic needs, including disabilities, in Nigeria. A descriptive study design with a survey technique was employed as the methodology. A standardised questionnaire w
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Lessy, Zulkipli, Abd Rachman Assegaf, and Sangkot Sirait. "Inclusive Education at Islamic and General Universities: An Analysis of Policies, Teaching Strategies, and Curriculum Implementation." TARBIYA: Journal of Education in Muslim Society 8, no. 1 (2021): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.15408/tjems.v8i1.18992.

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AbstractThis study recruited participants from UIN Sunan Kalijaga and Universitas Sanata Dharma in Yogyakarta and the University of Sydney, and the University of Western Sydney in Australia and aimed at investigating whether policies are implemented as a bridge to accommodate disabled students for admission and academic pursuits. In this combined policy research and case study, individual, group, and policymaker interviews were conducted. The findings indicate that, while university policymakers admit students with special needs, a lack of academic advocates among faculty has hampered understa
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Delgado-Gil, Serafín, David Manuel Mendoza-Muñoz, Carmen Galán-Arroyo, et al. "Attitudes of Non-Disabled Pupils towards Disabled Pupils to Promote Inclusion in the Physical Education Classroom." Children 10, no. 6 (2023): 1008. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children10061008.

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Inclusive education for disabled people is becoming increasingly important globally. Improving the factors that support the inclusion of people with disabilities in education is one of the main objectives. In addition to teachers, another major factor is how the attitudes of students without disabilities affect those with disabilities, which should be considered in maintaining an inclusive classroom climate. The aim of the study was to analyse the attitudes of non-disabled students towards the inclusion disabled students in Physical Education (PE) and to investigate differences according to ge
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8

Łuczak, Ewa. "Rozwój fizyczny uczniów z porodów wcześniaczych w wieku 7-11 lat." Anthropological Review 59 (December 30, 1996): 121–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1898-6773.59.14.

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9

Prasuna, K. Gnana, M. Harshitha, G. Chaitanya Deepti, K. Shalini, and B. Baby. "Implementation of Virtual Mouse Using Pupil Detection for Physically Disabled." International Journal of Computer Sciences and Engineering 11, no. 4 (2023): 39–45. https://doi.org/10.26438/ijcse/v11i4.3945.

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10

Ngeno, Daniel Kipkirui, Henry Kiplangat, and Frederick Ngala. "Finding out the predictive capacity independent variables on retention of disabled pupils in mainstreamed primary schools in Bomet County, Kenya." Journal of Education and Learning (JEL) 1, no. 1 (2022): 62–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.51317/jel.v1i1.314.

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This study sought to find out the predictive capacity independent variables on the retention of pupils with disabilities in mainstreamed primary schools in Bomet County, Kenya. The study adopted a survey research design. The target population consisted of 840 teachers. Yamane formula was used in getting a sample size of 271 teachers. The multi-stage sampling procedure was used. After collecting, coding and analysing the raw data, the study revealed information as follows: provision of appropriate instructional and physical resources significantly influences the retention of pupils with disabil
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11

Thomson, Diane J., and Lindsay Lillie. "The Effects of Integration on the Attitudes of Non-disabled Pupils to their Disabled Peers." Physiotherapy 81, no. 12 (1995): 746–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0031-9406(05)66592-3.

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12

Sabornie, Edward J., and James M. Kauffman. "Social Acceptance of Learning Disabled Adolescents." Learning Disability Quarterly 9, no. 1 (1986): 55–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1510401.

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The regular classroom sociometric status of learning disabled (LD) and nonhandicapped (NH) high-school students was examined. Forty-six LD students who attended regular classes for portions of the school day were matched with an equal number of NH students in 6 schools. A sociometric rating scale, the Ohio Social Acceptance Scale (OSAS), was administered in 32 physical education classes enrolling LD students. LD and NH students were found not to differ significantly in regular classroom sociometric status. In addition, LD pupils were as well known as their matched peers and rated fellow LD stu
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13

Ezeaka, VC, and EO Iroha. "Physical health status of pupils in a school for the mentally disabled in Lagos." Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal 10, no. 4 (2003): 238. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/1117-1936.174220.

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14

Adesokan, Adedayo. "Effect of physical exercise on the motor skills acquisition among pupils with intellectual disability." Indonesian Journal of Sport Management 2, no. 2 (2022): 159–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.31949/ijsm.v2i2.2490.

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Decrease in physical activities among pupils with intellectual disability has been noted to affect motor skill acquisition, thus the need to carry out a study on possible ways to improve motor skill acquisition is necessary, this is the purpose of this study; which is to examine the effect of physical exercise on motor skills acquisition among pupils with intellectual disability. Three research hypotheses were posed in this work. A 2x2 pre-post test control group quasi-experimental research design was used for this study. The population was all students with intellectual disability in Kwara St
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McCarron, Eamonn, Erica Curran, Paul McQueen, and Roy McConkey. "Engaging Children in Music-Making: A Feasibility Study Using Disabled Musicians as Mentors in Primary Schools." Education Sciences 13, no. 1 (2023): 72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/educsci13010072.

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The place of music in the school curriculum is under increasing threat, yet this is contrary to the growing evidence base of music’s value to pupils’ social and psychological development. A contributory factor is that many teachers report a lack of training, skill, confidence, or resources for excluding music in their classroom. An innovative project used young adults with disabilities as music mentors to improve children’s access to creative music-making, while also providing non-threatening models to the children’s teachers and providing them practical tools to embed music in their classroom
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Lovitt, Thomas, James Rudsit, Joseph Jenkins, Constance Pious, and Dina Benedetti. "Two Methods of Adapting Science Materials for Learning Disabled and Regular Seventh Graders." Learning Disability Quarterly 8, no. 4 (1985): 275–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1510591.

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Two methods for adapting a seventh-grade physical science text were investigated. In one approach, Precision Teaching (PT), specially designed see-to-say and see-to-write practice sheets were used featuring the important words and definitions of a chapter. For the other method, Study Guide (SG), sheets emphasizing the sequenced main ideas of a chapter were developed. Experimental, control, and contrast groups were formed in seven science classrooms at one school to assess the effects of the adaptations. PT was scheduled in four sections, SG in three. Gain scores on a multiple-choice test indic
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17

Tajri, Yacine, Jean Saint-Martin, and Tony Froissart. "A crusade against the curve? Physical education for disabled pupils in France after World War II (1945–1958)." Paedagogica Historica 56, no. 4 (2019): 520–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2019.1622576.

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18

B, Chandra, Kanaga Suba Raja S, Rohit M, and R. Sriram Vignesh. "Eyeball Movement Cursor Control Using OpenCV." ECS Transactions 107, no. 1 (2022): 10005–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1149/10701.10005ecst.

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The upcoming generation is going to be evolved with an interaction that will be nonverbal, which is called the eye gaze and it also develops a new mode of communication for disabled people. The basic need for this kind of a system is that it can provide the assistance that a third person gives for the physically disabled people and hence by the means of tracking the eyeball movement this is made possible. The right, left, top, and bottom movements are incorporated concerning the movement of the eyeball. The advanced version of this system comes with a chai that has wheels on the ends, hence th
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19

Chowdhury, Md Arif, Ehsanul Bari, Md Ismail Hossain, and Mohammad Mahfuzur Rahman. "Accessibility of primary education facilities to students with disabilities: a study in the context of disasters in Jashore, Bangladesh." Quality Education for All 2, no. 1 (2025): 321–40. https://doi.org/10.1108/qea-01-2024-0001.

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Purpose In disaster-prone countries such as Bangladesh, integrating disabled kids into education is critical to national development. While kids with disabilities experience disasters differently, prioritizing their education is even more crucial. Coastal Bangladesh is exposed to growing calamities, and disabled pupils experience severe challenges because of their constraints. The study aims to investigate the extent to which coastal Bangladeshi primary schools accommodate disabled students during disasters. Design/methodology/approach A total of 20 primary schools were investigated. A total o
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20

AZKA, ZAHID, AKRAM MADIEHA, IQBAL SHADAB, ULLAH AKRAM ASSAD, and SHAHARYAR RAJA. "IMPACT OF SCHOOL CLOSURE DUE TO COVID-19 ON DISABLED STUDENT'S WELLBEING IN LAHORE." Tianjin Daxue Xuebao (Ziran Kexue yu Gongcheng Jishu Ban)/ Journal of Tianjin University Science and Technology 56, no. 09 (2023): 247–57. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8385027.

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<strong>Abstract</strong> COVID-19 can have a significant impact on pupils in general. Fiscal and physical health concerns, fast change, and increasing isolation all affect students and everyone. Students with health/disabilities face more risks in a variety of respects than non-disabled students. The present research was conducted to find out Impact of School Closure Due to COVID-19 on Disabled Students&rsquo; Psychological Wellbeing in Lahore. Quantitative research method was used as a method of inquiry. The target population was the disabled students enrolled in high level special education
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Justyna, Charaśna-Blachucik. "THE OPINIONS OF PARENTS OF DISABLED AND NON-DISABLED STUDENTS CONCERNING INTEGRATED EDUCATION." Journal of Physical Education & Health 7, no. 11 (2018): 61–70. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4043564.

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Abstract This paper reports the results of a study concerned with the problems of integration in education at an elementary level. 130 parents of students with various types and degrees of disability and 130 parents of students without disabilities were asked to provide feedback in this area. On average, the classes applied in the study involved 17 students without a disability and 5 with a diagnosed disability. The tool used in research was a questionnaire comprising 7 questions combined with a certificate with supplementary information (age of the child, place of residence, type of disabilit
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22

Marinescu, Gheorghe, Virgil Tudor, Ana-Maria Mujea, and Carmen Băisan. "The Improvement of Strength in Mentally Disabled Pupils through the Use of Differentiated Instruction in the Physical Education Lesson." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 117 (March 2014): 529–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.02.257.

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23

Wisłowska, Kinga. "Dlaczego dzieci nazywają mnie „innym”, a nauczyciele patrzą na mnie „inaczej”? – temat niepełnosprawności w szkole XXI wieku." Dydaktyka Polonistyczna 17, no. 8 (2022): 93–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.15584/dyd.pol.17.2022.10.

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The paper discusses issues related to school education in the 21st century school with regard to disability. It presents the basic issues related to physical and mental dysfunctions, as well as discusses their specificity. It focuses on the issue of the exclusion of the disabled pupil from a class group and shows the teacher’s actions to prevent this exclusion. It also contains several lesson proposals using one of the art therapy methods, Kamishibai Theater, which will help students answer the questions: What is disability? Does disability prevent the establishment of friendly relationships?
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24

Haycock, David, and Andy Smith. "Inadequate and inappropriate?: The assessment of young disabled people and pupils with special educational needs in National Curriculum Physical Education." European Physical Education Review 16, no. 3 (2010): 283–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1356336x10382975.

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25

BEN RAKAA, Omar, Mustapha BASSIRI, and Said LOTFI. "Impact of adapted physical education and para-athletics on mental skills and on pedagogical and school inclusion of teenagers with disabilities." Retos 68 (May 14, 2025): 82–94. https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v68.111520.

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Introduction: This study examines the influence of the integration of two adapted programs (adapted physical education and para-athletics) on the mental abilities and of motor-disabled students. Objective: The objective is to identify strategies to promote effective inclusion in educational environments, particularly in physical education. Methodology: The study was conducted with 96 pupils with motor disabilities (14-18 yrs), enrolled in public schools in Morocco. In accordance with the provisions stipulated by the Para Athletics classification, the categorization of disability classes was di
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Hanna, Nałęcz, Ostrowska-Tryzno Anna, and Pawlikowska –. Piechotka Anna. "THE SPORTS OR RECREATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF SCHOOLS FOR PUPILS WITH DISABILITY." Journal of Physical Education & Health 8, no. 13 (2019): 36–43. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4043240.

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By preparing the space within an educational institution for a quantitatively significant group of pupils with special needs, we prevent exclusion by enabling environmental integration. That policy of public space management is consistent with the World Health Organization&#39;s (UN WHO) &quot;World Action Program for People with Disabilities&quot;, the European Union&#39;s document &quot;Accessibility: principles and lines directives&quot;, as well as with Polish law. The aim of this study was to analyse the adaptation of school sports and recreational infrastructure to the needs of students
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Stylianidou, Angeliki, and Elena Nardi. "Overcoming Obstacles for the Inclusion of Visually Impaired Learners through Teacher–Researcher Collaborative Design and Implementation." Education Sciences 13, no. 10 (2023): 973. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/educsci13100973.

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Teacher preparation to address the needs of disabled learners in mainstream mathematics classrooms is quintessential for the implementation of the inclusive educational policies that governments are often committed to. To identify teacher preparation needs, we draw on data and analyses from the doctoral study of the first author, who endorsed sociocultural and embodied perspectives in an investigation—first exploratory, then interventional—of visually impaired (VI) learners’ experiences and their teachers’ inclusion discourses. Here, we focus on the intertwined contributions of physical and di
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Kyakimwa, Sarah, Tukur Muhammad, Gidraf Joseph Wanjala, Wilson Kimani, and Turyamureeba Silaji. "School Environment and Retention of Learners with Disabilities in Universal Primary Schools in Kasese District." International Journal of Humanities, Management and Social Science (IJ-HuMaSS) 7, no. 2 (2024): 97–109. https://doi.org/10.36079/lamintang.ij-humass-0702.782.

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This study investigates the relationship between the school environment and the retention of learners with disabilities in Universal Primary Schools (UPS) within Kasese District, Uganda. Employing a descriptive research design integrating quantitative and qualitative methodologies, the study examines three main objectives: the impact of teacher support, school infrastructure, and school relationships on the retention of learners with disabilities. A total of 154 respondents, including teachers, head teachers, and pupils from six selected UPS, participated in the study. Data collection involved
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Azina, E. G., S. N. Sorokoumova, and T. V. Tumanova. "USAGE OF RHYTHM IN PSYCHOCORRECTIVE DEVELOPMENT OF YOUNGER SCHOOLCHILDREN WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DELAY IN THE CONTEXT OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION." Vestnik of Minin University 7, no. 1 (2019): 10. http://dx.doi.org/10.26795/2307-1281-2019-7-1-10.

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Introduction: the article deals with one of psychocorrective work direction with younger schoolchildren who have developmental delay and inclusively taught at comprehensive schools. Because of psychological and pedagogical features these children are in the majority of pupils who don’t cope with traditional school curriculum requirements. For systematic and successful education any child needs potential neurobiological readiness of brain systems and subsystems that provides the development of higher mental functions necessary for schooling. The results of neuropsychological investigations demo
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Haycock, David, and Andy Smith. "Still ‘more of the same for the more able?’ Including young disabled people and pupils with special educational needs in extra-curricular physical education." Sport, Education and Society 16, no. 4 (2011): 507–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13573322.2011.589647.

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31

Nitecka Walerych, Anna. "Jean Jacques Rousseau i Jędrzej Śniadecki o fizycznym wychowaniu dzieci." Biuletyn Historii Wychowania, no. 35 (October 19, 2018): 7–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/bhw.2016.35.1.

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In this paper I focus on a comparison of two works: “Emile, or On Education” (1762) by the Geneva philosopher, J. J. Rousseau, and “O fizycznym wychowaniu dzieci” [Eng. On the Physical Upbringing of Children] (1805) by a Polish scholar, J. Śniadecki, in particular on those fragments that relate to the physical (corporeal) raising of children. Both the authors were renowned figures from the age of Enlightenment, they both subjected the then methods of raising children to criticism, and postulated changes contained in their reform programmes. They both proposed specific guidelines, theoretical a
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Tesfamikael, Hadish Habte, Adam Fray, Israel Mengsteab, Adonay Semere, and Zebib Amanuel. "Simulation of Eye Tracking Control based Electric Wheelchair Construction by Image Segmentation Algorithm." Journal of Innovative Image Processing 3, no. 1 (2021): 21–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.36548/jiip.2021.1.003.

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In this fast-paced world, it is very challenging for the elderly and disabled population to move independently to their desire places at any convenient time. Fortunately, some of the people have good eyesight and physically strong to take care of their survival. Nevertheless, Electric wheelchair (EWC) can provide them a better lifestyle with commendable confidence. At the same time, the hand, head and voice recognition-based EWC meet many limitations. Despite, the eye-tracking-based EWC provides a better smartness in their lifestyle. This research article discusses better accuracy achievement
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Rizzo, Sara, Alessandro Frolli, Antonella Cavallaro, Giuseppina Sinigaglia, and Sebastiano Scire. "Social Representation of Disability and Teachers." Education Sciences 11, no. 6 (2021): 266. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/educsci11060266.

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With the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), the term disability is consolidated in its dynamic meaning as a condition that is defined by the interaction between personal factors and the environment in which one lives (WHO, 2001). The characteristics of the reference context that can be an obstacle or facilitation are evaluated with greater emphasis, including the perception of disability by teachers as a factor that will mediate the implementation of different behaviors and methodologies stemming from it. The purpose of the present survey, which includes
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Sharma, Krishna. "Decompressive craniotomy for severe traumatic brain injury: Our experience and review of literature." Nepal Journal of Neuroscience 21, no. 1 (2024): 14–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/njn.v21i1.63309.

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Introduction: Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the most devastating injury affecting physical, mental, social and financial health of an individual and a society. The research, understanding and management of TBI is mainly focussed towards the secondary effects of the traumatic brain injury. Maintaining intracranial pressure within reasonable bounds is essential for successful TBI therapy, as an uncontrolled intracranial pressure (ICP) plays a major role in determining the course and prognosis of the injury. In general, ICP can be managed medically and/or surgically. In this article, we
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Nivala, Elina, and Päivikki Rapo. "Insights into social pedagogical research and discussion in Northern Europe – Report from NERA2018 Congress in Oslo." Papers of Social Pedagogy 9, no. 2 (2018): 58–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0012.4388.

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The 46th NERA Congress was held on March 8th to 10th 2018 at the University of Oslo. NERA is the Nordic Educational Research Association that brings together researchers in the field of educational sciences in the Nordic countries. An essential part of the association and of the congress are NERA’s 24 networks that are organised around different subject areas in educational sciences like early childhood research, youth research etc.. There is a network also for social pedagogy. Its aim is to develop and strengthen the cooperation between researchers and professional groups, engaged or interest
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ILICH-STOSHOVIKJ, Danijela, Snezhana NIKOLIKJ, and Maja NEDOVIKJ. "THE ATTITUDES OF TEACHER TOWERED NUMERIC ASSMESSMENT IN SCHOOLS FOR PHYSICALLY DISABLED PUPILS." August 22, 2015. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.28949.

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Afaf Mohammed Ocasha Mohammed, Mohmmed Ali Ahamed Mohmmed, A. "Difficulties facing the integration of people with motor disabilities in formal education at the basic stage - South Darfur (2018 – 2019): الصعوبات التي تواجه دمج ذوي الإعاقة الحركية في التعليم النظامي بمرحلة الأساس بولاية جنوب دارفور (2018- 2019)". مجلة العلوم التربوية و النفسية 4, № 5 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.26389/ajsrp.a130719.

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The aim of this study was to identify the difficulties facing the integration of motor disabilities in formal education at the basic stage in the state of South Darfur from the point of view of principals and teachers in the state of South Darfur. For the purposes of this study, the researchers followed the analytical descriptive approach, in addition to the case study methodology. In order to collect the information and data, the researchers relied on the observation tool in addition to the questionnaire distributed to a random sample of 29 principals and teachers of basic schools in South Da
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Nguimatio, Clementine, and Peter Ngwa. "Self-Perception of Adaptation Teaching Practices in The Ordinary Classroom and School Performance of Children with Cerebral Palsy." International Journal Of Scientific Advances 5, no. 2 (2024). http://dx.doi.org/10.51542/ijscia.v5i2.18.

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Self-perception of adaptive teaching practices in the ordinary classroom and school performance as adjustment capacities in children with cerebral palsy. We found that the students with disabilities in the CNRPH and PROMHANDICAM inclusive schools are of various types. The fact that IMC learners are associated with physically and sensorially disabled and non-disabled children raises the problem of performance in terms of their ability to adjust to their inclusion in school. Our general aim is to examine and understand how the self-perception of pedagogical practices can have a significant effec
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K, Gnana Prasuna M. Harshitha G. Chaitanya Deepti K. Shalini B. Baby. "Implementation of Virtual Mouse Using Pupil Detection for Physically Disabled." International Journal of Computer Sciences and Engineering (e-ISSN: 2347-2693) 11, no. 4 (2023). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7955948.

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Current technology often uses the computer mouse or finger to move the cursor along the screen. A mouse or finger movement is detected by the system and mapped to the cursor movement. HCI (Human-Computer Interface) involves the use of computer technology to provide a human-computer interface. Communication between humans and computers needs to be made more effective through appropriate technology. Interaction between humans and computers is crucial. It is therefore important to find a method for enabling individuals with disabilities to communicate with computers and be part of the Information
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Rudd, Tania, Kirsty Hemingway, Benjamin Kirk, and Anthony Maher. "The physical education experiences of pupils with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: An ableism-critical perspective." European Physical Education Review, July 27, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1356336x231188891.

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There is an ever-growing body of research relating to disabled pupils’ experiences of physical education (PE). However, our research is novel because it draws on an ableism-critical perspective to amplify the voices and centre the PE experiences of pupils with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). We used an online survey to gather quantitative and qualitative data from 100 participants with a diagnosis to explore their perceptions of: (a) the influence of JIA on participation in PE; (b) relationships with same-aged peers and their influence on experiences in PE; (c) relationships with teachers
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Lang, Felix, Klaus Schoene, Felix Goessler, Dirk-Matthias Rose, and Peter Kegel. "Hepatitis A and hepatitis B infection risk among employees at schools for disabled pupils." Scientific Reports 12, no. 1 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-24579-7.

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AbstractAim of this project was to assess occupational biological hazards with regard to the risk of hepatitis A (HAV) and hepatitis B (HBV) and the need for occupational health care in schools for pupils with special needs. Teachers and educational specialists were surveyed about activities potentially providing exposure to biological agents and their individual immune status regarding HAV and HBV by a detailed questionnaire. Descriptive analyses, group comparisons and logistic regression were performed to identify factors influencing the HAV and HBV immune status. 1398 teachers and education
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Mohd Saad @ Zakaria, Mohd Farizan bin, Chia Jong Huey, Nornazira binti Suhairom, Muhammad Sukri bin Saud, and Salmalina binti Salleh. "Competencies Elements for Vocational Teachers of Learners with Special Educational Needs: A Systematic Literature Review Analysis." Journal of ICSAR, July 13, 2024, 327–38. https://doi.org/10.17977/um005v8i2p327.

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A nationally aligned education is expected to help impaired pupils attain their full potential. In recent years, there has been an increase in global awareness and recognition of vocational education and training for disabled learners. This includes regulatory changes in special needs education, creating specific curriculum curricula for fast-paced businesses, incorporating technology into lessons, constructing new vocational special needs education facilities, and reorganizing existing facilities to match current demands. These vocational education programs necessitate the creation of new voc
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Kuvaeva, I. "Teachers of Special Schools: Stressors and Manifestations of Occupational Stress." KnE Life Sciences, November 1, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/kls.v4i8.3309.

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Introduction. This article demonstrates the stress syndrome among teachers of special schools. There are two teaching techniques to pupils with physical and mental disorders: (1) in-class interaction and (2) distance computer interaction. We assume that teachers of special schools perceived a high level of occupational stress;the specific professional and organizational stressors explained the differences in stress syndromes among teachers of traditional (in class) and distance computer interaction. Method. Our study applies the IDICS system that analyzes the syndrome of occupational stress: s
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Patti-Signorelli, Anna, and José Javier Romero-Díaz de la Guardia. "CHAPTER 4: The biopsychosocial model and what it means for understanding inclusion in education - Brahm Norwich Introduction This chapter focuses on two specific pieces of Paul Cooper’s writing from 19 and 15 years ago respectively, namely his ideas about the biopsychosocial model and how he developed and used this perspective in unique ways to expand our thinking about inclusion and inclusive education. I believe this will give me the opportunity to show the detail of his analyses and way he engaged in the key debates going on in the field. It will also enable me to show the continuing relevance /of the arguments he voiced to current issues and concerns. Paul’s intellectual approach has been to oppose what he sees as false oppositions or dichotomies and this is something I have learned from and shared with him. The biopsychosocial model was for him a way to combine and bring together a more complex synthesis not just as an intellectual exercise, but as critical to enhancing educational practice, especially for those with disability and difficulties. A critical discussion of education, ADHD and the biopsychosocial (BPS) perspective Paul Cooper’s paper on the biopsychosocial perspective (Cooper, 2008) focuses on ADHD to propose a BPS model or what is called here a ‘paradigm’ as a way forward to address controversies amongst educationalists. Its argument had and continues to have much wider significance for the field of special educational needs and inclusive education. The main point in the paper was to show how the polarity between biological and social explanations for learning and behaviour problems had become redundant and unhelpful. ADHD it was stated was influenced by both biology and the social environment and indeed was ‘socially constructed’. But, this notion of social construction was not like the one adopted by the social model advocates referenced in the paper and still widely used in the 2020s. Shakespeare (2018, p. 68), for example, refers to the social model of disability as ‘the idea that people are disabled by society, rather than by their bodies’. What motivated Paul was the negativity towards the ADHD concept based on what he saw as: ‘outdated thinking and a lack of understanding of the diagnosis and the biopsychosocial paradigm through which it can be usefully understood’ (p. 457). Before examining the arguments about a social or a BPS model of ADHD, it worth exploring the usage of the terms in these models in written publications generally and in relation to academic research publications in education. Using the google ngram viewer system shows that the phrase ’social model of disability’ is used 114 times more in those texts covered within the google system than the phrase ‘biopsychosocial model of disability’ published in 2019. In addition, references to the phrase ‘social model of disability; increased 2.6 times from 2000 to 2019. By contrast, the use of the phrase ‘biopsychosocial model of disability’ increased more rapidly by 9.3 times, over the same period. Though this analysis is confined to those ngram accessed books in English, it does show that the ‘social model’ was used in this corpus considerably more than the ‘BPS model’. This is so even when the ‘BPS model’ had a greater increase in usage compared to the ‘social model’ over this almost two decade period. This picture is repeated when examining research literature references in education using the Education Research Complete database (ERC). In a search for literature with the terms ‘inclusive education or inclusion or mainstreaming or integration’ and either ‘biopsychosocial model’ or ‘social model’, it was found that there were 13 times as many references for social model than BPS model. It is clear from these analyses that Paul Cooper’s position has not been widely adopted since the 2000s and into the late 2010s, despite the international interest in the WHO International Classification of Functioning (ICF), which adopts a BPS model of disability (Hollenweger, 2012). My argument here is that this does not detract from the value and importance of the arguments in his paper. I am not going into the details of the case for the usefulness and risks in the use of medical classification systems that include ADHD as the most prevalent of childhood behaviour disorders. Cooper’s 2008 paper does this, and no doubt since then the current state of knowledge about ADHD has changed. What I will focus on is the argument made by Paul Cooper about the involvement of biological processes in functioning that comes to be identified as ADHD. Here he considered evidence for there being a problem in the response inhibition system, involving neuropsychological executive functioning mechanisms implicating physiological processes in the frontal lobes of the brain. In addition, he also implicates the genetic studies that have shown a much greater incidence of ADHD among identical than non-identical twins and among children who are biologically related as opposed to adopted. What he resists is the polarising between recognising these biological processes on human behaviour and the social processes; the either – or in favour of the both – and perspective. This is a central point in the commentary I am making of Paul Cooper’s positions and one which will be made too in relation to his ideas about inclusion in education below. The BPS model he is advocating rejects a biological determinism and represents biological factors as being mediated by psychosocial processes; the biological is subjected to social construction at various social and psychological levels. See Figure 4.1 which represents this kind of BPS model. In this respect the BPS model he advocates has strong links to Bronfenbrenner’s bio-ecological model (Bronfenbrenner and Morris, 2006). It is notable that many references to Bronfenbrenner’s ecological model have tended to also split the biological from the psycho-social (Tudge et al., 2009). Figure 4.1 Factors in interaction in the bio-psycho-social model of ADHD Critical reactions to ADHD have involved the dismissal of ADHD by some as a medical construct that individualises educational failure and disruptive behaviour. Part of the aversion to ADHD has been its use to legitimise the practice of using drugs as a form of social control of defiant children. Some argued this approach represented wrong-headed pseudo-science. The argument which Paul Cooper focussed on was the assertion that this individualised these problems, distract from how schools and teachers were involved in these problems, and so absolve them of responsibility to provide relevant opportunities for these groups. He countered this argument by claiming that the BPS model recognises that schools are a major setting through which institutional control and pedagogical practices contribute to the construction of ADHD. In his argument for a more complex BPS model, he countered the arguments of authors like Slee (1995) who were critical of what they portrayed as: ‘The monism of locating the nature of [classroom] disruption in the neurological infrastructure of the child is myopic and convenient’ (Slee, 1995, p. 74). Slee has continued this critical line of argument with his more recent views about the language of special educational needs in referring to: ‘the saturation of our discourse and thinking with the quasi-medical posturing of special educational needs. The conceptual foundations and usage of terms like special educational needs passes without a second thought’ (Slee, 2018; p. 78). Paul Cooper’s thorough response to four challenges from the critical perspective continue to be very relevant to the current circumstances. Firstly, it has been claimed that the ADHD diagnosis is somehow bogus or ‘illicit’ because there is an absence of neuro-scientific evidence. In this article he illustrates how this is ‘patently untrue’ (p. 463). Secondly, ADHD is sometimes claimed to be an example of biological determinism, a claim which expresses a fear of determinism and its associated denial of human agency. Here he has sympathy with this fear but shows how this is not well founded as regards developmental opportunities, given the interaction between biological inheritance and environmental factors in the development of behavioural difficulties. Paul Cooper argued that not only were there several biological pathways implicated in the development of ADHD, but that ADHD is not biologically determined in the simplistic sense suggested by some; see the Slee quote above. He turns the argument by ADHD critics about ADHD diverting attention from school factors against their position. He suggests that portraying ADHD as an example of biological determinism, itself diverts attention from converting a biopsychosocial account of ADHD into pedagogical and other interventions. By knowing more about the biological, psychological and social factors in ADHD enables us, he argued, to avoid aggravating experienced difficulties and promoting educational engagement. The third challenge he addressed was that an ADHD ‘diagnosis’ rests on value-laden, culturally-specific judgements about behavioural or cognitive norms. Here Paul Cooper adopts a perspective, not often found in debates about behaviour difficulties and school education norms. He recognised that children who are biologically predisposed to develop ADHD can be at a disadvantage by culturally based assumptions about appropriate school and classroom behaviour. But, this, he argues, does not reflect on the clinicians who identify ADHD, but reflects on the weaknesses of, what he called, ‘Western mass education’. This issue is about whether to change the educational environment to accommodate the student or to change the student to enable him or her to engage with an unchanging environment. As Paul Cooper recognised the attempt is often made to combine environmental and individual changes. He suggested that using medication can be seen as the failure of the school to make changes that enable the student with ADHD to engage effectively. The implications for those wanting to make schools more inclusive is to learn the lesson that ADHD teaches about shaping the educational environment to improve learning opportunities. In discussing how he approached this challenge, it is also notable that some psychologists have adopted more recently a BPS model of ADHD and supplemented the social aspects with a focus on the cultural aspects that relate to the mental health needs of culturally and linguistically diverse children and young people (Pham, 2015). The fourth challenge Paul Cooper responded to was that accepting an ADHD diagnosis ‘legitimise[s] the practice of drugging defiant children into docility’ (Skidmore, 2004, p. 4). To this he points out that informed opinion does not consider medication for ADHD as an essential treatment, and that whatever is decided is to be in the context of a multi-modal treatment programme that includes psychosocial and educational interventions. In his paper he refers to the UK guidance from 2000 and this is still the current guidelines (NICE, 2018). How parents participate in intervention selection is also illustrated in Pham (2015). The linked and final challenge he dealt with was that ADHD represents the wrongful medicalisation of defiance in school children. Here Paul Cooper questioned the link between defiance and the functional issues associated with ADHD. He suggested that defiance is better considered as a cognitive distortion affecting social engagement rather than a deficit in executive functioning associated with ADHD. So, not complying with parent wishes is seen as non-volitional and not to be confused with defiance. For him what was concerning was the ‘high moral tone’ (p. 470) which concealed limited understanding about ADHD that he believed could be dangerous. A crucial difference between the social and BPS models In defending the BPS model from critical arguments, Paul Cooper did not examine the ideological or value basis for the knowledge claims in these debates. From a critical perspective, it has been suggested by Slee & Weiner (2001) that it is possible to identify two groups of researchers, which they characterise in these terms, namely those who work within, what they call the ‘positivist paradigm’, accept the way things are, attempt to make marginal reforms and who criticise ‘full inclusion’ as ideological; and those who see inclusive education as cultural politics and call for educational reconstruction. This distinction between a positivist / technical versus cultural political position can be aligned with one between an investigatory versus an emancipatory perspective to research about disability (Oliver, 1999). Oliver frames the research-as-investigation as the dominant form of social research which is unacceptable to oppressed groups, such as those with disabilities, who aim to collectively empower themselves. In this perspective the social model of disability expresses the emancipatory stance which is pursued through cultural politics. This contrasts with a technical – interventionist perspective that derives from what Slee and Weiner (2001) call a ‘positivist paradigm’ and is associated with what is called a medical or a bio-medical model. It can be seen that this dichotomy between research stances embraces the splitting which Paul Cooper argued against. Figure 4.2 below represents these distinct research stances as adopting emancipatory or investigatory values, while showing their main focus and linked assumptions. With emancipatory values the main focus is on reducing the oppression of the vulnerable with this being done through collective socio-political action and in doing so entailing a causal assumption that it is the dominant social system that oppresses. With investigatory values, the main focus is on identifying complex causal models of a phenomenon and in doing so assumes that this knowledge can be used for subsequent improvement interventions. Figure 4.2 Value bases underlying different research stances One of the main arguments in this chapter is that there are links and common elements to these two basic value positions, so raising questions about the split and opposition between them. Both connect knowledge with action for social change, on one hand, and both assume some causal processes, on the other. The difference is in the assumptions of their main focus. Identifying complex causal processes (e.g. that includes social processes as part of a BPS perspective) is the primary focus of the investigatory stance, while change depends on applying this knowledge in interventions. This stance represents an outsider-spectator-intervenor perspective. By contrast, reducing the oppression of the vulnerable is the primary focus of the emancipatory stance, with this being through collective political and social action. This stance represents an insider-participator perspective. So, while distinct, there are connections to be recognised between them which can help to understand what the social stands for in these two models. The social in the social model stands for where change is to be focussed; in the socio-political arena. The social, by contrast, in the BPS model stands for the social factors that need to be understood in their interaction with bio-psychological causal factors. Making use of the distinction between insider-outsider role perspectives enables us to see how these different value stances can be connected and not seen as opposites to select between. As Paul Cooper argued in his 2008 paper, informed opinion does not consider medication for ADHD as an essential treatment / intervention; the BPS model implies multi-modal methods including psychosocial and educational interventions (NICE, 2018). Intervention / treatment acceptability is also an important consideration when considering individual children with identified ADHD from a BPS perspective, as illustrated in Pham’s (2015) case study. This implies that parents and young people will participate in action decisions, which gives them an insider role. However, the social model goes beyond insider participation at the individual level, to involve collective participation at institutional and societal levels too. This is where the BPS model could be open to insider participation beyond the individual level, to see the value of institutional and societal participation too. And, as the BPS can be open to the collective action of the social model, so the social model can be open to the outsider perspective’s recognition of multi-level causal processes (including the bio-psychological levels) and their associated interventions. Inclusion as a buzz-word In this 2008 paper Paul Cooper suggested that the use of insights from the BPS model in developing educational provision is likely to lead to a more genuinely inclusive education system. This was written after an earlier editorial he wrote in the journal Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties in 2004 (Cooper, 2004). Here he pointed to the overuse and misuse of the word inclusion, suggesting that it will lose its meaning and that the purposes for which it was coined will become neglected. One way of challenging this misuse, he mentioned, was to be vigilant about how it is used and to call for greater clarity. In this editorial he stated that social inclusion is about active participation and engagement with other people. With inclusive education, he continued, it is not just about social inclusion, but an individual’s active engagement in formal learning processes. Here Paul Cooper goes beyond common ideas about inclusion which are defined in terms of social and academic participation (as in the Inclusion Index; Booth and Ainscow, 2011), by clarifying that it is also about academic and social engagement. From this it was clear that inclusion was more than both location / placement and social interaction with other people; it was also about personal engagement with others and with formal learning. Paul Cooper was not alone in linking engagement with inclusion, he shared this with Mary Warnock, the chair of the Warnock Committee which in 1978 set out new policies about the education of children and young people with disabilities and difficulties (Warnock, 2005). In her 2005 policy paper she rejected the idea of educational inclusion as about ‘all children under the same roof’. She preferred a learning concept of inclusion, which was about: ‘including all children in the common educational enterprise of learning, wherever they learn best’ (Warnock, 2005). Though she does not use the term ‘engagement’ as such, her notion of learning where done best connects with ‘engagement’ and prioritises this over placement, a view which was also adopted later by Paul for the area of education of children and young people with social, emotional and behaviour difficulties (Cooper and Jacobs, 2011). Paul Cooper drew on the psychological ideas of Marjorie Boxall in the Boxall Profile (Bennathan and Boxall, 2003) to connect Inclusion with engagement, as he mentioned in his 2004 editorial. For him engagement was at the heart of educational inclusion from a cognitive perspective. He adopted the five subskills of what the Boxall Profile termed ‘the organization of experience’: whether the child gives purposeful attention, participates constructively, connects up experiences, shows insightful involvement and engages cognitively with peers. Within this framework he recognised that children with social, emotional and behavioural difficulties (SEBD) can have problems with some or all of these skills. So, it can be argued that the child who experiences SEBD is socially, emotionally and cognitively excluded from what is going in class lessons; with SEBD being framed as a barrier to inclusion. This concept of a barrier is very different to that proposed from a social model perspective as in the Inclusion Index (Booth and Ainscow, 2011), in which barriers are only external to the person. But, Paul Cooper does not draw the conclusion that children with SEBD can never be ‘included’. Here he makes the distinction between inclusion-as-location and inclusion-as-engagement, with the implication that in some cases when there is not mainstream class inclusion this does not mean there cannot be some engagement inclusion. He also reminded us that inclusion is such that nobody is ever fully included in any situation all the time. In this sense his ideas resemble Qvortrup and Qvortrup’s (2018) argument that inclusion and exclusion are connected through peoples’ simultaneous involvement in different social arenas. With social interactions involving negotiations in all situations, Paul Cooper argued that any episode can result in tensions and the rejection of the people involved . This is a feature of our lives and in this respect the child experiencing SEBD is no different from others. However, he pointed out that the child or young person with a SEBD is at greater risk of rejection or exclusion, which may be attributed to individual characteristics in interaction with social circumstances (in line with a BPS model). Using this notion of engagement, he also approached the questions of teaching children and young people with SEBD in terms of the BPS model. In avoiding a focus just on problems located in the student, he adopted an interactionist perspective that combined specialist teaching knowledge about individual differences with teachers’ practical thinking about decision-making that led to adapted teaching (Cooper, 2004). He reviewed in this 2004 chapter and in his later 2008 paper discussed above, the various teaching strategies that research had shown to promote further engagement for children with ADHD. It is useful here to compare his engagement perspective to a well-known ‘Inclusive Pedagogy (IP) framework for participation in classrooms’ developed by Florian and Black-Hawkins (2011). This framework in covering access, collaboration, achievement and diversity aimed to extend what was typically available in the classroom community to all. It avoided having learning activities for most being alongside different activities for some who experience difficulties. It also proposed differentiation by pupil choice for everyone while rejecting ability grouping. This is an approach that required flexibility to be driven by need and not curriculum coverage, while seeing difficulties in learning as professional challenges rather than learner deficits. Though Paul Cooper’s perspective agreed with some elements of this inclusive pedagogy framework (e.g. flexibility and responding to learning difficulties as a challenge), his does not accept the either-or polarity at the core of the framework with the adoption of only one option: differentiation by choice v. by grouping and only opting for the former, or seeing learning difficulties as a professional challenge v. learner deficits and opting only for the challenge option). This IP framework reflects the medical v social model polarity that he argued against while favouring a BPS model. Based on his approach of seeing social and academic engagement as being at the heart of educational and social inclusion, he believed that it followed that: ‘students are best placed in educational settings where they have access to and support for maximum social and academic engagement’. (Cooper, 2004, p. 222). In his view, this meant that there was no simple way to decide about the provision setting. For some pupils this meant access to various forms of provision, but always a detailed analysis of individual capabilities and needs as well as what provision affords should determine the decisions. Conclusion This chapter has focussed on two of Paul Cooper’s papers in which he explained and justified his ideas about the biopsychosocial model and how he developed and used this perspective in unique ways to expand our thinking about inclusion and inclusive education. Through relating and contrasting these with other contemporary and current ideas I hope to have shown his distinctive and insightful contribution. I have also tried to extend his adoption of a both-and rather than an either-or approach by discussing the epistemological and value bases of different models, on one hand, and how difference and distinction does not imply irreconcilable opposition between the key models in the field. References: Bennathan, M. & Boxall, M. (2003) The Boxall Profile. East Sutton: SEBDA. Booth, T. and Ainscow, M. (2011) Index for Inclusion: developing learning and participation in schools. 3rd ed. Bristol: CSIE. Bronfenbrenner, U., and Morris, P. (2006) The bioecological model of human development. In W. Damon & R. M. Lerner (Eds.), Handbook of child psychology: Vol. 1. Theoretical models of human development (6th ed., pp. 793–828). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. Cooper, P. (2004) Is ‘inclusion’ just a buzz-word?, Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties, 9:4, 219-222, DOI: 10.1177/1363275204051391 Cooper, P. (2004) ‘AD/HD’, in A. Lewis & B. Norwich (eds) Special Teaching for Special Children? Pedagogies for Inclusion. Buckingham: Open University Press. Cooper, P. (2008) Like Alligators Bobbing for Poodles? A Critical Discussion of Education, ADHD and the Biopsychosocial Perspective. Journal of Philosophy of Education, 42, 3-4, 457-474. Cooper, P. and Jacobs, B. (2011) From Inclusion to Engagement: Helping Students Engage with Schooling Through Policy and Practice. London: Wiley. Florian, L. and Black-Hawkins, K. (2011) Exploring inclusive pedagogy, British Educational Research Journal, 37, 5, pp. 813-828. Hollenweger, J. (2012) Using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and health Children and Youth version in education systems. American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 91, 13, pp. 97-102. NICE (2018) Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: diagnosis and management NICE guidelines. Published: 14 March 2018. Access on 23.5.23 www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng87 Oliver, M. (1999) Final accounts and the parasite people. in Corker, M. and French, S. (eds.) Disability discourse. (eds.) Maidenhead: Open University Press. Pham, A.V. (2015) Understanding ADHD from a Biopsychosocial-Cultural Framework: A Case Study. Contemporary School Psychology, 19:54–62. Qvortrup, A. and Qvortrup, L. (2018). Inclusion: Dimensions of inclusion in education. International Journal of Inclusive Education, 22(7), 803-817. Shakespeare, T. (2018) Disability: the basics. London: Routledge. Skidmore, D. (2004) Inclusion. Buckingham,: Open University Press. Slee, R. (1995) Changing Theories and Practices of Discipline. London, Falmer. Slee, R. and Weiner, G. (2001). Education Reform and Reconstruction as a Challenge to Research Genres: Reconsidering School Effectiveness Research and Inclusive Schooling. School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 12:1, 83-98, DOI: 10.1076/sesi.12.1.83.3463 Slee, R. (2018) Inclusive Education isn’t Dead, it Just Smells Funny. London: Routledge. Tudge, J.R.H., Mokrova, I., Hatfield, B.E. and Karnik, R.B. (2009) Uses and Misuses of Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory of Human Development. Journal of Family Theory & Review, 1, 198–210. Warnock, M. (2005) Special Educational Needs: A New Look. London: Philosophy of Education Society of Great Britain, Impact Series No. 11." International Journal of Emotional Education 15, no. 2 (2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.56300/esja4186.

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The present study aimed to determine the emotional characteristics of the Trait-Meta-Mood-Scale (TMMS-24) in music-oriented secondary school students in Italy. A 24-item self-assessment protocol was applied to measure the level of perceived emotional intelligence according to 3 dimensions: attention, clarity and repair. This tool represents one of the most widely used self-assessment measures of perceived emotional intelligence. The objective of the study was to conduct construct validation to examine reliability of the Italian version of the TMMS-24 in order to identify its feasibility for th
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