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British Journal of Special Education (BJSE)


Référence :  Vol. 52, n°2, juin 2025

 

EDITORIAL

  • Editorial, Graham Hallett, Fiona Hallett

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

  • ‘I prefer to be alone than to be among them’: In-school experiences of learners with disabilities and their caregivers in inclusive schools in Ghana, Ebenezer Mensah Gyimah, Ebenezer Dassah, Maxwell Peprah Opoku, William Nketsia, Philip Atta Mensah
  • Trauma-informed education for pupils with adverse childhood experiences and social, emotional and mental health needs: Special school headteachers' lessons learned from the coronavirus pandemic, James Waite
  • Augmented reality's potential for addressing writing challenges in students with learning disabilities, Barathan Selvam, Grace Annammal Gnana Piragasam
  • Examining the impact of drama-based sessions on the social emotional well-being of Autistic pupils in a special school: A multi-informant qualitative study, Elise Robinson, Laura Crane
  • Perceptions of inclusion among parent members of school governing bodies in South Africa, Anwynne Kern

SENCO FORUM

  • Ofsted and its ‘new’ approach to ensuring accountability for inclusive education, Christopher Robertson

POLITICS PAGE

  • Scotland: Audit Scotland scrutiny, John Perry

BOOK REVIEW

  • Building community to create equitable, inclusive and compassionate schools through relational approaches, Emily Patterson
  • Building community to create equitable, inclusive and compassionate schools through relational approaches, Gemma Heathcote

Special Section: Editorial Advisory Board
EDITORIAL

  • Editorial, Garry Squires

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

  • The problem is that inclusion in England is simply rhetoric with no real substance, Garry Squires
  • Attitudes towards special educational needs: Dysconscious ableism?, Fiona Hallett, Graham Hallett
  • Additional support for learning in Scotland: Rhetoric and reality, Catherine Reid, Margaret Sutherland, Ines Alves
  • Accountability, scapegoating and encouraging rebellious joys: Teaching in England, Carla Solvason
  • Do you really know me? Providing effective support for young people: The impact of labels, intersectionality and belonging, Gill Richards
  • Fostering inclusive teaching competences: Concrete practice-oriented suggestions for teachers to deal with diverse learning groups in inclusive settings, Verena Letzel-Alt, Marcela Pozas
  • Curriculum in alternative provision: Conversations with senior leaders, Philip Garner
  • How to make schools more inclusive for children and young people with special education needs/disabilities: A deliberative democratic approach, Brahm Norwich

Special Section: Literacy and Power
GUEST EDITORIAL

  • British Journal of special education special issue: Literacy and power, Craig Collinson, Mahmoud Mohamed Emam, Rhiannon Packer

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

  • ‘Through a glass darkly’: Dyslexic identity and hermeneutic injustice, Craig Collinson, Jessica Eccles-Padwick, Elizabeth Leach-Leung, Julien Villeneuve
  • Dyslexia: Identity, labelling and its place in inclusive education, Cathryn Knight
  • Small but mighty: Challenging hegemonic discourses in developing literacy in a minority language, Rhiannon Packer, Mirain Rhys
  • Is it time to ditch the notion of ‘core subjects’?, Marjorie Thomas
  • Decolonising literacy assessments in Oman: Curriculum-based measurements and power dynamics, Mahmoud Mohamed Emam, Ehab Mohamed Naguib Omara
  • Students with emotional and behavioural disabilities have inequitable opportunities to develop reading skills, John William McKenna, Michael Solis
  • When words are not enough: How creative storytelling helped me navigate trauma, Meagan Corrado


Informations complémentaires :
  https://nasenjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/.../2


mot(s) clé(s) :  besoins éducatifs particuliers, recherche en éducation