The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

Parents and Challenging Behaviour

Preferential treatment or unwanted in mainstream schools? The perceptions of parents and teachers with regards to pupils with special educational needs and challenging behaviour

First published: 27 March 2013
Cited by: 8
CorrespondenceKaren E. BroomheadDepartment of Educational ResearchCounty South BuildingLancaster UniversityBailriggLancaster LA1 4YWEmail: k.broomhead@lancaster.ac.uk

Abstract

This study explored the perceptions of parents and teachers regarding the differential treatment or stigma experienced by pupils with challenging behaviour – more specifically, those with behavioural, emotional and social difficulties (BESD), as well as children with visible special educational needs (Down's syndrome and/or profound and multiple learning difficulties) who frequently displayed challenging behaviour as a characteristic of their SEN. Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with ten parents of children with challenging behaviour, together with 15 educational practitioners employed in mainstream and BESD schools. Findings revealed how several parents, and staff employed in BESD schools, viewed pupils with challenging behaviour as ‘unwanted’ in mainstream schools. The remaining parents, as well as mainstream practitioners, reported the opposite and indicated that these pupils received treatment deemed to be ‘preferential’ in the mainstream. This has direct implications for those concerned with supporting pupils with challenging behaviour in mainstream settings.

Number of times cited: 8

  • , So You Think We Can Trust? (Re)building Home-School Collaboration with Families of Children with Disability, Working with Families for Inclusive Education, 10.1108/S1479-363620170000010026, (255-271), (2017).
  • , “Everyone knows me …. I sort of like move about”: The friendships and encounters of young people with Special Educational Needs in different school settings, Environment and Planning A, 49, 6, (1361), (2017).
  • , Inclusion: the role of special and mainstream schools, British Journal of Special Education, 44, 3, (292-312), (2017).
  • , Harry Potter and the paradox of the ‘expert’, Support for Learning, 31, 3, (202-207), (2016).
  • , ‘They think that if you're a teacher here … you're not clever enough to be a proper teacher’: the courtesy stigma experienced by teachers employed at schools for pupils with behavioural, emotional and social difficulties (BESD), Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 16, 1, (57-64), (2014).
  • , Characteristics of Students with Emotional/Behavioral Disorders: Perspectives of General Education Teachers in Saudi Arabia, Psychology, 06, 05, (525), (2015).
  • , Acceptance or rejection? The social experiences of children with special educational needs and disabilities within a mainstream primary school, Education 3-13, 10.1080/03004279.2018.1535610, (1-12), (2018).
  • , Classroom Management and Student Achievement: A Study on Five Elementary Classrooms, Anadolu Journal Of Educational Sciences International, 10.18039/ajesi.292598, 7, 1, (155-183), (2017).