Worlds apart? The nature and quality of the educational experiences of pupils with a statement for special educational needs in mainstream primary schools
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] M. Brundrett,et al. Managing LSAs: an evaluation of the use of learning support assistants in an urban primary school , 2004 .
[2] Julie Radford,et al. Opening up and closing down: How teachers and TAs manage turn-taking, topic and repair in mathematics lessons , 2011 .
[3] Coleen R. Jackson. Reassessing the impact of teaching assistants: how research challenges practice and policy , 2013 .
[4] P. Croll,et al. Special Needs in the Primary School: One in Five? , 2000 .
[5] Peter Farrell,et al. The impact of teaching assistants on improving pupils’ academic achievement in mainstream schools: a review of the literature , 2010 .
[6] Peter Blatchford,et al. Challenging and changing how schools use teaching assistants: findings from the Effective Deployment of Teaching Assistants project , 2013 .
[7] L. Florian,et al. From special education to effective schools for all : a review of progress so far , 2013 .
[8] P. Blatchford,et al. The effect of support staff on pupil engagement and individual attention , 2009 .
[9] Peter Blatchford,et al. Reassessing the Impact of Teaching Assistants: How Research Challenges Practice and Policy. , 2011 .
[10] Peter Blatchford,et al. Double standards and first principles: framing teaching assistant support for pupils with special educational needs , 2010 .
[11] Stephen John Willoughby,et al. Maximising the Impact of Teaching Assistants: Guidance for school leaders and teachers , 2017 .
[12] M. F. Giangreco,et al. Teacher assistants in inclusive schools , 2007 .
[13] Peter Blatchford,et al. The educational experiences of pupils with a Statement for special educational needs in mainstream primary schools: results from a systematic observation study , 2013 .
[14] A. Hodkinson. Conceptions and Misconceptions of Inclusive Education , 2005 .
[15] P. Angelides,et al. The role of paraprofessionals in developing inclusive education in Cyprus , 2009 .
[16] Alexander Minnaert,et al. Regular primary schoolteachers’ attitudes towards inclusive education: a review of the literature , 2011 .
[17] Christine M. Rubie-Davies,et al. Fostering learner independence through heuristic scaffolding : A valuable role for teaching assistants , 2013 .
[18] Peter Blatchford,et al. Maximising the Impact of Teaching Assistants: Guidance for school leaders and teachers , 2015 .
[19] Peter Blatchford,et al. The wider pedagogical role of teaching assistants , 2011 .
[20] A. Lewis,et al. Mapping a pedagogy for special educational needs , 2001 .
[21] Gill Rutherford,et al. In, out or somewhere in between? Disabled students' and teacher aides' experiences of school , 2012 .
[22] Christine M. Rubie-Davies,et al. Enhancing learning? A comparison of teacher and teaching assistant interactions with pupils , 2010 .
[23] M. F. Giangreco. Critical Issues Brief: Concerns About the Proliferation of One-to-One Paraprofessionals , 2009 .
[24] M. F. Giangreco,et al. “Be Careful What You Wish for …”: Five Reasons to be concerned about the Assignment of Individual Paraprofessionals , 2005 .
[25] A. Hodkinson. Pre‐service teacher training and special educational needs in England 1970–2008: is government learning the lessons of the past or is it experiencing a groundhog day? , 2009 .
[26] Pat Sikes,et al. Voices on: teachers and teaching assistants talk about inclusion , 2007 .
[27] L. Abbott,et al. Developing inclusive schools: the pivotal role of teaching assistants in promoting inclusion in special and mainstream schools in Northern Ireland , 2002 .
[28] Daniel J. Marcucci. Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion, & Keith Morrison (2011). Research methods in education (7a ed.). New York: Routledge. , 2011 .