Welcome to our new site!
If you had an account with us on our previous site, you'll need to reset your password here.
The Incomplete Child: An Intellectual History of Learning Disabilities (Disability Studies in Education #6)
Description
With the passage of Public Law 94-142 in 1975, the learning disability construct gained national legitimacy. Feeding that political achievement, behind the very idea of a learning disability, was the development of a science that blended neurology, psychology, and education. This book tracks the historical creation of the science of learning disabilities, beginning with the clinical research with brain-injured World War I soldiers conducted by German physician Kurt Goldstein. It traces the growth of the two primary research traditions, the psycholinguistic theory of Samuel Kirk and the movement education of Newell Kephart, exploring how specific scientific orientations, theories, and practices led to the birth of the learning disability in the United States.
Other Books in Series
Ellen A. Brantlinger: When Meaning Falters and Words Fail, Ideology Matters (Critical Leaders and the Foundation of Disability Studies in Education #43)
The Strong Poet: Essays in Honor of Lous Heshusius (Critical Leaders and the Foundation of Disability Studies in Education #44)
Steven J. Taylor: Blue Man Living in a Red World (Critical Leaders and the Foundation of Disability Studies in Education #50)
Dismantling the Disabling Environments of Education: Creating New Cultures and Contexts for Accommodating Difference (Disability Studies in Education #24)
Inclusive Education Twenty Years after Salamanca (Disability Studies in Education #19)
Disabling Characters: Representations of Disability in Young Adult Literature (Disability Studies in Education #18)
Disabling Characters: Representations of Disability in Young Adult Literature (Disability Studies in Education #18)
Practicing Disability Studies in Education: Acting Toward Social Change
South Asia and Disability Studies: Redefining Boundaries and Extending Horizons (Disability Studies in Education #15)
Reading Resistance: Discourses of Exclusion in Desegregation and Inclusion Debates (Disability Studies in Education #1)
Vital Questions Facing Disability Studies in Education: Second Edition
How Teaching Shapes Our Thinking About Disabilities: Stories from the Field (Disability Studies in Education #26)
Both Sides of the Table: Autoethnographies of Educators Learning and Teaching With/In [Dis]ability (Disability Studies in Education #12)
South Asia and Disability Studies: Redefining Boundaries and Extending Horizons (Disability Studies in Education #15)
Narratives of Inclusive Teaching: Stories of Becoming in the Field (Disability Studies in Education #25)
Constructing the (M)Other: Narratives of Disability, Motherhood, and the Politics of «Normal» (Disability Studies in Education #22)
Disrupting Schools: The Institutional Conditions of Disordered Behaviour (Disability Studies in Education #23)
Disrupting Schools: The Institutional Conditions of Disordered Behaviour (Disability Studies in Education #23)
