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02/01/1900
Artículos

Research demonstrates that students with disabilities are harassed more than their nondisabled peers. Students with disabilities who have been severely harassed have argued that they are not receiving a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) in the Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) as required by Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). A school district’s failure to respond […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

In this article, I extend the growing literature on education spaces by examining disabled young people’s possibilities for sociality in mainstream and specialist high schools in the UK, focusing on visually impaired (VI) young people’s narratives of bullying, friendship and their complex relationships with carers and support workers. By using stories from both mainstream and […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

An introduction to articles published within the issue is presented, including one which examines the prevalence ad risk of child maltreatment among children with disabilities, another article which provides evidence that adults with intellectual disablities/developmental disabilities (ID/DD) are more prone to social victimization, and one article on the prevalence and severity of bullying of adolescents […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

The mythology of the “norm” has direct repercussions for schools, and its ideological reinforcement is the primary cause of bullying today. Though it is difficult to pinpoint an origin for “the norm,” the medical model and its systemic structural power is one powerful institution that perpetuates this mythology. The medical model has a biological orientation […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

Peer victimization is a serious social problem that can negatively affect children”s psychosocial development and school adjustment, and may have lasting effects for victims. The rates of peer victimization among preschool children with disabilities, however, are unknown. This paper examines the prevalence and nature of peer victimization among children with disabilities in school settings using […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

This study examined the prevalence rates of bully victimization and risk for repeated victimization among students with disabilities using the Special Education Elementary Longitudinal Study and the National Longitudinal Transition Study-2 longitudinal datasets. Results revealed that a prevalence rate ranging from 24.5% in elementary school to 34.1% in middle school. This is one to one […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

Parents’ involvement in their children’s education is known to be an important predictor of a range of adaptive outcomes. For learners with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), lack of parental engagement and confidence has been highlighted as a problematic issue. Given this, the objectives of the current study were to: (i) determine the amount […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

Developmental coordination disorder (DCD) is a chronic disability that impacts children’s performance of everyday motor-based activities and is associated with the development of secondary social and mental health problems. The purpose of this study was to investigate peer victimization and depression in children who were and were not at risk for DCD. Selected from a […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

Background: To compare the strength of the association between peer victimization at school and subjective health according to the disability or chronic illness (D/CI) status of students across countries. Methods: This study used data from 55 030 students aged 11, 13 and 15 years from 11 countries participating in the 2005–06 Health Behaviour in School-aged […]

02/01/1900
Artículos

Traumatic childhood experiences have been found to predict later internalizing problems. This prospective longitudinal study investigated whether repeated and intentional harm doing by peers (peer victimization) in childhood predicts internalizing symptoms in early adolescence. 3,692 children from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), as well as their mothers and teachers, reported on […]