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200 pages
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Size: 297k
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An Ethnographic Study of a Special Education School
The Harris-Hillman Story
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e-Book PDF
| Institution: | Vanderbilt U |
|---|---|
| Advisor(s): | Robert Crowson, Terrance Deal, Sherman Dorn |
| Degree: | Doctor of Education |
| Year: | 1997 |
| Volume: | 200 pages |
| ISBN-10: | 0965856496 |
| ISBN-13: | 9780965856492 |
| Purchase options | |
The purpose of this study was to describe, using the tools of ethnography and qualitative research, selected events in the history of a public special education
school and its school culture. The year of the study, 1994-1995, the school
served 125 students with cerebral palsy and other disabilities affecting
some or all of their physical, sensory, and cognitive abilities.
Study participants included faculty and staff, former students, parents,
school administrators, and others identified with the school and in the
Nashville community during the 1994-1995 school year. In-depth interviews
with study participants, on-site observations, semi-structured interviews
with informants, document, and archival research were used to create five
collective tales based on stories of those who knew the school best between
1975 and 1995.
This is a story of one special education school's founding, success, and
survival. In recent years, the local school system closed 5 of 7 special
education schools, its own K-12 school enrollment declined, and rumors
it too would soon close. The story presents a saga of success and survival
as the school faced a new social construction of schooling called the "inclusive
schools movement."
By applying institutional theory to the study of organizations, this study
offers an explanation of how one special education school survived the
inclusion movement by adapting to societal demands and by maintaining certain
environmental elements considered important to school survival. This study
provides a number of stories which serve as evidence of how the continuum
of services for students with disabilities continues to work as inclusion
efforts in some public schools often go awry.
This study investigated (1) events beginning with the school's founding
in 1975, (2) school success and survival using institutional theory and
organizational analysis, and (3) the school as a model day school in special
education's continuum or Cascade of Services. At the time of this study,
the inclusive schools movement was believed to be responsible for declining
enrollments at Harris-Hillman, increasing numbers of students with disabilities
being placed in other public and private schools, and rumors the school
would soon be closed.
Study results offer a collection of stories from one educational setting
over two decades. Discussion of these stories is followed by study conclusions
that provide support for special education schools and a continuum of service
and placement options for students in need of special settings with appropriate
curricular content and instruction. It is a unique story of a special education
school and its history over 20 years between 1975 and 1995.
200 pages
Choose vendor for paperback edition
Size: 297k
Download a sample of the first 25 pages