Search Results
You searched for "All in a life design"
You searched for "All in a life design"
"This booklet is for people with disabilities who think that having friends and having fun is important. It is also for their families and teachers. This booklet has specific information on identifying, planning , and doing social, leisure and recreational activities. . .
Read MoreThis book encourages reflection on present means of supporting people and looks at the shift towards supports that recognise and accommodate individual differences, and acknowledge self-determination and choice. The book includes questions for discussion on the topics covered. Keyword: Theory,,,,
Read More"This article. . firstly discuss(es) theories of leisure which emphasise that leisure is intrinsically linked to work and that there is a socialisation process which inculcates a belief in people that the enjoyment of leisure has to be first earned by work.
Read MoreUditsky argues that there are many similarities between the inclusive education movement and a growing general educational reform movement. This, he writes, should work to strengthen families feeling isolated, alone or defeated. Families need to align themselves with those advocates (professional and otherwise) of general educational reform. NB.
Read MoreThis author argues that there are serious problems with the modern public education system (western style) and that reform calls for revolutionary cultural change: not only within the educational system but within the context of society as a whole.
Read MoreThis is a good article about the differences between traditional residential agencies and those that are truly individualised and person-centred.
Read MoreFriends can be important in finding and keeping a job; friends can contribute to the long term security of a person; one of the benefits of integrated employment will be the possibility of increased social relationships and participation, resulting in the formation of friendships.
Read MoreA great poem written from the perspective of a high school student. The student realises after a history lesson on genocide that the exclusion of a student with a disability (Diane) at the school is a much smaller version of such historical atrocities.
Read MoreThe authors of this article were part of a study group focussing on how students with severe disabilities can actively participate in lessons within the regular classroom (K- Year 5) alongside their non disabled peers.
Read MoreThe goal of the Inclusive Education Project was to "create or further develop schools as communities in which all students. . . can attend and experience full membership".
Read More