Full Inclusion and the Education of Children and Youth with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Behavioral Disorders
- Vol. 19 (4) , 277-293
- https://doi.org/10.1177/019874299401900404
Abstract
The recent professional literature has been replete with articles focusing on the school reform movement labeled full inclusion whereby advocates are pushing for the placement of all students with disabilities in general education settings. While the movement's roots can be traced to advocates of persons with severe handicaps, educators, administrators, and parents are generalizing the movement's goals to students with other disabilities including emotional and behavioral disorders. Related issues surrounding the full inclusion movement must be examined prior to wide adaptation for all students with disabilities. The purpose of this article is to explore three relevant issues in determining appropriate placements for students with emotional and behavioral disorders. First, this article examines some of the current objectives of the full inclusion movement in relation to the education of students with emotional and behavioral disorders. Second, issues surrounding the placement of students with disabilities are often resolved not in professional literature but in courtrooms; therefore, current court cases focusing on inclusion that impact how special education services are delivered are also summarized. Finally, provided a general education setting is the most appropriate placement, promising practices for educating students with emotional and behavioral disorders to maximize their success are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unifying General and Special Education Teacher Preparation Some Cautions Along the Road to Educational ReformPreventing School Failure: Alternative Education for Children and Youth, 1993
- Choices for IntegrationIntervention in School and Clinic, 1991
- Social Skills Instruction in Secondary EducationTeacher Education and Special Education: The Journal of the Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional Children, 1990
- Social Validation of Adolescent Social Skills by Teachers and StudentsRemedial and Special Education, 1989
- Studying Mildly Handicapped Children's Adjustment to MainstreamingRemedial and Special Education, 1987
- Conceptual and Definitional issues in the Assessment of Children's Social Skills: Implications for Classifications and TrainingJournal of Clinical Child Psychology, 1986
- Social Mainstreaming of Handicapped StudentsRemedial and Special Education, 1985
- Parents' Perceptions of Their Learning Disabled Child's Educational PerformanceLearning Disability Quarterly, 1983
- Research on Teachers’ Pedagogical Thoughts, Judgments, Decisions, and BehaviorReview of Educational Research, 1981
- Social Skills Training with Handicapped Children: A ReviewReview of Educational Research, 1981