Special Educational Needs: A New Look
By (Author) Dr Lorella Terzi
By (author) Baroness Mary Warnock
By (author) Professor Brahm Norwich
Series edited by Professor Christopher Winch
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
1st April 2010
2nd edition
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
371.90941
Paperback
184
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Special Educational Needs: A New Look by Mary Warnock was initially published by the Philosophy of Education Society of Great Britain in 2005. In this new edition, Warnock has updated her argument, Brahm Norwich has contributed a counter-argument and Lorella Terzi has providedan introductionand afterword, drawing the two debates together.
The issues debated in this new edition of Special Educational Needs: A New Look include:
The statement of special educational need
The concept of inclusion
Special Educational Needs: A New Look raises issues which will be of interest to all involved in special education and inclusion, including teachers, policy makers and educationalists.
A rich historical perspective on the evolution of specialized education for children with disabilities in the UK. The difficulties in achieving the lofty ideals of the early Warnock Report have many parallels in the USA, even though the two countries converged on their policies from somewhat different pathways. Too often, leaders in the field refuse to acknowledge failures of past policy...the fact that this book so forthrightly states that past policies have not met their aspiration and that major review and reconsideration are necessary is refreshing. I commend the authors for their commitment to children who are too often failed by schools and I believe that this text should be read by all involved in education of children with special needs.' Margaret McLoughlin, Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Education and Associate Director at the Institute for the Study of Exceptional Children, University of Maryland, USA
'A fascinating dialogue between two giants in the field of special education. If they agree about nothing else, they are at one in believing that thinking and practice in the field is currently very confused and badly in need of clarification by a high-powered enquiry. Simplistic solutions are clearly not the answer. Neither the members of any such enquiry, the members of whatever government takes office after the next election, nor anyone concerned about the field of special education can afford to ignore the analysis contained in this volume.' Lord Colin Low of Dalston, Member of the House of Lords, UK
Lorella Terzi is Reader in the School of Education at Roehampton University, UK. Mary Warnock is by professional training a philosopher. She has also been a prominent figure in education, first as a fellow and tutor in Philosophy at St Hugh's College, Oxford. She is the author of a number of books, most notably An Intelligent Person's Guide to Ethics. Brahm Norwich is Professor of Educational Psychology and Special Educational Needs in the Graduate School of Education and Lifelong Learning at the University of Exeter, UK. Christopher Winch is Professor of Educational Philosophy and Policy at King's College London, UK.