Publication | Closed Access
Disproportionality in Special Needs Education in England
70
Citations
33
References
2008
Year
DisabilityEducationSpecial Needs EducationCritical Disability StudiesSpecial Education SystemUnited StatesDevelopmental DisabilitiesLearning Disability AssessmentAbleismExceptional ChildrenEducation LawInclusive EducationDisability StudyExceptional ChildSpecial Needs SystemAccessible EducationDisability AwarenessSecondary EducationSociologySpecial Education
Unlike the United States, England does not have a special education system based on the identification of students as having disabilities of one or another type. Instead, the English system enables help to be provided to students on the basis of assessments of their individual “special educational needs.” The authors consider the implications of this position for the disproportional presence of students from different social groups in the special needs system. They argue that disproportionality is a reality in England, as in the United States, though it cannot be understood simply in relation to racial minorities. Nor, within a non-disability-based system, does it arise principally from the misidentification of students as having disabilities. Instead, it reflects broad educational and social inequalities. Disproportionality research, therefore, needs to concern itself with these inequalities.
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