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Creating insight about inclusion together with young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities

Creating insight about inclusion together with young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities
Creating insight about inclusion together with young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities
The development of inclusive education, characterised by both universal momentum and geopolitical differences, has largely omitted children and young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. For this group, access to educational opportunities at all has been slow to be won and separation for ‘special care’ for their very high support needs is the norm. There have been advances in recognising the human rights and indeed humanity of people with the most profound intellectual disabilities, but the focus of educationalists has often been on how to foster and document fine-grained learning gains and on the specialist nature of the teaching they need. In this chapter, in contrast, the emphasis is on how the spirit of ‘Nothing about us without us’ can extend to children and young people with profound intellectual disabilities such that they are at the heart rather than periphery of the education and research process. The potential for belonging in education and research is illustrated through exploratory work on doing research inclusively with children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities in two English special school classes. The starting point is seeking to know them from being with them in a particular way. The knowledge shared in the chapter is a mix of big picture state of art overview and deep intersubjective knowledge/feeling created together with children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. The implications for future research in inclusion include the need to start from a different mindset in which belonging and reciprocity inform an asset-based approach.
inclusive education, inclusive research, profound intellectual and multiple disabilities, research methods, ethics, belonging
Emerald Publishing
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef
Grace, Joanna Marie
2d321222-1533-4f68-a76b-1782deb00eed
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef
Grace, Joanna Marie
2d321222-1533-4f68-a76b-1782deb00eed

Nind, Melanie and Grace, Joanna Marie (2023) Creating insight about inclusion together with young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. In, Including Voices: Respecting the Experiences of Individuals from Marginalised Communities. (International Perspectives on Inclusive Education) Emerald Publishing. (In Press)

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

The development of inclusive education, characterised by both universal momentum and geopolitical differences, has largely omitted children and young people with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. For this group, access to educational opportunities at all has been slow to be won and separation for ‘special care’ for their very high support needs is the norm. There have been advances in recognising the human rights and indeed humanity of people with the most profound intellectual disabilities, but the focus of educationalists has often been on how to foster and document fine-grained learning gains and on the specialist nature of the teaching they need. In this chapter, in contrast, the emphasis is on how the spirit of ‘Nothing about us without us’ can extend to children and young people with profound intellectual disabilities such that they are at the heart rather than periphery of the education and research process. The potential for belonging in education and research is illustrated through exploratory work on doing research inclusively with children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities in two English special school classes. The starting point is seeking to know them from being with them in a particular way. The knowledge shared in the chapter is a mix of big picture state of art overview and deep intersubjective knowledge/feeling created together with children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities. The implications for future research in inclusion include the need to start from a different mindset in which belonging and reciprocity inform an asset-based approach.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2023
Keywords: inclusive education, inclusive research, profound intellectual and multiple disabilities, research methods, ethics, belonging

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480000
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480000
PURE UUID: 019bab7f-4af0-4c44-b003-9a7ceb99f102
ORCID for Melanie Nind: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4070-7513

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 16:30
Last modified: 05 Jan 2024 02:41

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Contributors

Author: Melanie Nind ORCID iD
Author: Joanna Marie Grace

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