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Inclusive Practice

Resourced provision: the impact of inclusive practices on a mainstream primary school

Jonathan Glazzard

Corresponding Author

Correspondence

Jonathan Glazzard

School of Education and Professional Development

University of Huddersfield

Queensgate

Huddersfield

HD1 3DH

Email: j.glazzard@hud.ac.uk

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First published: 04 September 2013

Abstract

This personal account from a special educational needs co‐ordinator illustrates the negative impact that resourced provision has had on one school. The provision caters for children with communication and interaction difficulties and is housed in a mainstream primary school. For this school, while the provision has had a beneficial impact on the development of inclusive values among pupils, it has also led to a decline in the overall effectiveness of the school. The achievement data of pupils in the provision has had a detrimental impact on overall school performance data. Current narrow measures of school effectiveness in England mean that schools with increasingly diverse student populations can pay the price for their commitment to inclusion, as this example illustrates.