Schooling Without Labels: Parents, Educators, and Inclusive Education

Front Cover
Temple University Press, Sep 9, 2010 - Education - 210 pages

Douglas Biklen closely examines the experiences of six families in which children with disabilities are full participants in family life in order to understand how people who have been labeled disabled might become full participants in the other areas of society as well. He focuses on the contradictions between what some families have achieved, what they want for their children, and what society and its social policies allow. He demonstrates how the principles of inclusion that govern the lives of these families can be extended to education, community life, and other social institutions.

The parents who tell their stories here have actively sought inclusion of their children in regular schools and community settings; several have children with severe or multiple disabilities. In discussing issues such as normalization, acceptance, complete schooling, circles of friends, and community integration, these parents describe the challenge and necessity of their children's "leading regular lives."



In the series Health, Society, and Policy, edited by Sheryl Ruzek and Irving Kenneth Zola.
 

Contents

I Achieving Regular Lives
1
II The Inclusion Philosophy
20
III Escape from Client Status
49
IV The Myth of Clinical Judgment
83
V Two Students One Myth
106
Individual or Schoolwide Change?
128
VII The Inclusive School
141
Equality among Equals
181
References
189
Index
195
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2010)

Douglas Biklen is a Professor of Special Education and Director of the Division of Special Education and Rehabilitation at Syracuse University.