1st Edition

The Education of Dual Sensory Impaired Children Recognising and Developing Ability

Edited By David Etheridge Copyright 1995
    154 Pages
    by Routledge

    154 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, originally published in 1995, is about ability, not disability. It is about what children can do and how they can progress. All children have the moral, ethical and legal right to be educated, no matter what barriers society puts in their way because of their physical disabilities. Dual sensory impaired children, like all others, have the right under the Education Reform Act, 1988, to a broadly-based and balanced curriculum that is appropriate to their needs since they, like any children, will not develop educationally unless that curriculum is appropriate to their needs. This book aims to show some of the ways in which individual children can demonstrate and develop their individual abilities.

    List of Abbreviations;  Contributors to this Book;  Foreword Jessica Hills;  Introduction: Recognising and Developing Ability David Etheridge;  1. Educational Assessment of Deafblind Learners Stuart Aitken  2. Rebound Therapy as a Method of Developing and Assessing Communication Ruth Farrow  3. Objects of Reference Marion McLarty  4. Multi-Sensory Rooms and Dual Sensory Impairment: Use and Design Richard Hirstwood  5. The Educational Benefits of Reflexology for Children with Dual Sensory Impairments Sylvia Povey and David Etheridge  6. Working with Families of Dual Sensory Impaired Children: A Professional Perspective June Allen  7. The Training and Role of Intervenors in One Region of Britain Jonathan Griffiths  8. A Consortium Approach to Staff Development John Kaye and Keith Humphreys  9. Coals to Newcastle: Enriching and Extending Educational Provision Through Regionalisation David Etheridge

    Biography

    Etheridge, David