2 Faculty of Arts and Education Assessment Guide ECE404 Inclusive Education for Young Children ASSESSMENT TASK 1 – Literature Review 3 ASSESSMENT TASK 1 – LITERATURE REVIEW - DETAILS – WORD COUNT...

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2 Faculty of Arts and Education Assessment Guide ECE404 Inclusive Education for Young Children ASSESSMENT TASK 1 – Literature Review 3 ASSESSMENT TASK 1 – LITERATURE REVIEW - DETAILS – WORD COUNT 1500 (10% above or below) WEIGHTING 40% REFERENCES Minimum 6 – Harvard Style AT1 DESCRIPTION Students will write a literature review, which should include a critique of contemporary research, current legislation, policies and teaching practices relating to a specific issue/topic of inclusive education. Students need to demonstrate an understanding of the issues and challenges that children and families from vulnerable backgrounds may experience in the education system and the implications upon teaching practice, supported by scholarly literature. Students need to conclude the literature review by making recommendations for inclusive teaching strategies that are considered appropriate to their topic/issue. NOTE: Assignment requirements o Include a cover letter or header including name, student ID and Unit Code Word Doc or PDF o Spacing – 1.5 o Font Size - 12 o Accurate use of Harvard referencing style throughout o Academic writing style, sentence structure and grammar o Marking criteria addressed ________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4 AT1 STEP BY STEP GUIDE STEP 1 - Decide on a topic/issue for your literature review You need to choose one particular issue/topic to focus on – and it must relate to inclusive education. Each issue/topic of focus will have various aspects to explore and examine, and you need to decide which aspect of your chosen issue/topic you wish to focus on. Consider what you have been learning about in ECE404 and reflect on your own understandings/experiences with inclusive education. What is of interest to you? What would you like to learn more about? What knowledge would you like to share with others? Choose your topic/issue and think of a particular aspect to focus on in this space. Remember your literature review will only focus on a small aspect of a larger issue, so avoid making it too broad! * Some suggestions to get you started . . . diverse family structures; gender; indigenous families; poverty; homelessness; disability; abuse; asylum seekers/immigrants; mental health etc. STEP 2 – Source & review the literature Find relevant and contemporary articles using the Deakin Library Data Base (A+ Education or ERIC are both great databases) or Google Scholar (use ‘advanced search’ and enter key words related to your topic). You must also include relevant government policy and legislation documents, snapshots or reports – these are available in the Cloud resource folders and via Google. * While you are required to provide a minimum of 6 references in your literature review, remember that more is better! 5 STEP 3 - Write a succinct and informative literature review Using the articles/reports/snapshots etc. start to map out the ‘flow’ of your literature review. Consider what you should write about first to introduce your topic, and then what the logical order should be as you review the literature, and how you should conclude your work. Remember that you are informing the reader of the topic – imagine your marker knowns nothing about this topic! INTRODUCTION Your introduction should ‘signpost’ your literature review. Start by introducing your topic (for instance, children with a disability), and then describe its importance in education (use legislation or policy) and the various aspects that surround the issue (challenges for teachers, children & families) . Conclude your introduction with a brief mention that you will provide recommendations for teaching. PARAGRAPHS/BODY Star by providing a definition of the topic (for example, if looking at children with Downs Syndrome, describe what this is medically. Draft concise paragraphs that summarise the research and the relevant findings, and then compare and contrast with other research findings. Now bring it all together and make your writing flow logically. Your literature review should provide details, evidence and offer a stance on your topic/issue that serves to inform the reader. You should also include appropriate teaching strategies that will support includsive education practice, as relevant to your chosen topic/issue. CONCLUSION Conclude your Literature Review by briefly summarizing the key points you discussed, and then describe the teaching strategies you recommend. REFERENCE LIST You must ensure to include a reference list at the end of your work. Be sure to follow correct Harvard Referencing procedures (Guide located online) and double check your work to make sure that all sources cited in your work appear in your reference list, and vice versa. 6 AT1 STUDY TIPS When writing a literature review, your aim is to critique, compare, contrast and summarise contemporary research and government documents that relate to a specific issue/topic. You need to adopt a narrow lens in order to delve deeply into the issue, thereby providing an informative snapshot that contributes to knowledge in that space. Preparation is key to writing a quality literature review. You can do this by keeping notes and summary of each article that you read, and then mapping out your review so that you can write your literature review with ease! Each summary of an article should give a sense of the research aims, methods and size of the project as well as the finding(s) that are relevant to your case study. So you will end up with paragraphs something like the following: Perry et al. (2006) used 10 pre-school sites with significant numbers of Indigenous children to identify successful transition programs and the reasons for their success. Through interviews, research conversations, drawings, photographs, observations and document analysis, the researchers found that high quality programs involve and engage families and communities in a meaningful, relevant and challenging curriculum. They noted, however, that ‘A program deemed to be successful in one location is not necessarily going to be successful in another location’ (Perry et al. 2006, p. 7). You should begin this journey by finding out some of the basics – follow the links below for guidance and advice on what a literature review is and how to go about writing one. WATCH: Writing the Literature Review - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70n2-gAp7J0 READ: Literature Review - https://library.unimelb.edu.au/ data/assets/pdf_file/0008/1924109/Literature_Review.pdf As you embark on your first assessment task, you are likely to have questions and I encourage you to ask these in the ECE404 Discussion Forum in the ‘Questions about AT1’ folder. Questions will be responded to promptly, and the information provided will be seen by all students thereby ensuring that everyone has access to the same information! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70n2-gAp7J0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70n2-gAp7J0 7 Once you have gathered a collection of literature, read through each one carefully and note down important details, finishing with a 100 word summary paragraph for each of your sources. It must include the aim, subjects, methods and 1-3 key findings. *The following table provides an example of how you could keep these notes & return to them when writing Example ARTICLE 1 AIM Briefly Describe the aim of the project SUBJECTS Write down who and how many participants (e.g. teachers/parents/children) METHOD Write how the data was collected (e.g. interviews/survey/observations etc) FINDING #1 Write one key findings from the project FINDING #2 Write a second key finding FINDING #3 Write a third key finding SUMMARY Critically reflect on the project and consider the details you have noted. Write a 100 word paragraph to summarise the article. Finish by making a note of the implications on policy/practice etc * Note: This is a suggestion to help your writing – you do not need to submit this with your assignmen REFERENCE Write the reference in this space, referring to the Deakin Harvard Referencing Guide 8 o Read widely! Find scholarly sources of literature and find out as much as you can about your selected topic/issue. o A literature review is not an opinion piece – this means you must not state your own opinions, but rather present information using research as evidence to support your claims. o The aim of a literature review is not to restate the findings of each article you read. Rather, it aims to critique and analyse the issue by describing what is known, what has changed, what is yet to be known etc. o If the findings are similar, use words like “Similarly, xxx found that . . . ” or “xxx also focused on …” or “xxx also found …”. o If the findings are different, use words like “In contrast, xxx found that …” or “On the other hand xxx found that . . .”. o Your literature review should have a brief introduction to your chosen topic/issue, several paragraphs that examine the critical or key components of the topic/issue, and a succinct conclusion. o Your literature review should be succinct, informative and offer a critical analyse of the literature you have complied. o You must reference throughout your work, and provide a reference list at the end – all literature referenced in text must be in your reference list, and vice versa. o A good piece of advice is to aim to finish your literature review 2-3 days before it is due for submission. This way, you can have a final read of your work with fresh eyes and a clear mind, thereby enabling you to consider if your work reads well and meets the marking criteria. It will also help you to find possible grammatical or referencing errors. o If possible, have someone proof read your literature review and ask them what it tells them about your issue … reflect on their response and ask yourself ‘is that what I intended the reader to understand?’. Having your work proofread may also highlight grammatical errors. o Stick to the work limit – if you find you are over the word limit refer back to the aforementioned study tips and work on reducing the word count of each paragraph. I wish you the best of luck on your path of discovery and successful completion of AT1! 9 AT3 – STUDY TIPS  Engage with your study guides and readings
Answered Same DayDec 12, 2021ECE404Deakin University

Answer To: 2 Faculty of Arts and Education Assessment Guide ECE404 Inclusive Education for Young Children...

Rimsha answered on Dec 16 2021
143 Votes
NAME: _______________________
STUDENT ID: _______________________
UNIT CODE: ECE404
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION FOR YOUNG CHILDREN
ASSESSMENT TASK 1 – LITERATURE REVIEW
Table of Contents

Introduction    3
Limited Resources for Disabled Students in Mainstream Schools    3
Resources Required to Support Disabled Children in Schools    4
Equipment    4
Integration Aide    5
Professional S
upport to Children and Training for the Educator    5
Teaching Strategy that can be supported from Funding    5
Individual Learning Plans    5
Conclusion and Summary    6
References    7
Introduction
Every child has unique sets of skills, capabilities, and qualities, which give the strength to them. It is a right of all children to get the proper education. Inclusive education can be defined as the education system, which consists of the policies, values and principles aim to include different and diverse children studying and learning side by side. Inclusive education ensures that all the young children living with disabilities or having additional need can participate in education, achieve learning, and grow alongside normal children.
One of the main issues with inclusive education is lack of resources for disabled students in mainstream education; although, there are many governmental policies, which support the inclusive education for the young children. There are government policies such as disabled service plan, which support inclusive education for the children, yet disabled children failed to get proper education in mainstream schools due to limited resources and lack of training among educators.
Limited Resources for Disabled Students in Mainstream Schools
Disability can be defined as the physical or mental limitation of the individual, which restricts their movement, senses, and activities. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistic, in 2018, around 4.4 million Australian were suffering from disability, which is 17.7% of the total population. Among this, 5.7% has severe disability. On the contrary, 23.3 % are suffering from mental or behavioural disorders. Apart from this, around 7% of children are disabled (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2019).
It is estimated the 90% of the children between the age of 5 and 18 suffering from disability go to primary or secondary school to seek the education. On the contrary, 86% of the disabled children go to mainstream school in comparison to 14% who received their education from special schools (AIHW, 2019). The Disabled standard for education 2005 was developed under the disability discrimination act, which clarifies the obligation of the educators and training provider. As suggested by Hansen et al. (2018), it ensures that students suffering from disability can have access to the education equal to all the normal children and encourages the participation in education like normal children.
In 2015, under this act, review of the standards has been done and educators are made aware of the standards that need to be maintained in achieving the goal of the act. Apart from this, allocation of the resources was also suggested to maintain the standards (Australian Government, 2019). The allocation of the resources for the disabled children in mainstream school is very limited. As stated by Carrington et al. (2015), teaching of disabled person is different from the normal children. In mainstream giving equal opportunities to these children along with normal children required large number of resources.
Since disabled children have special needs, development of communication between educator and disabled children is necessary to make the children comfortable as well as educator can also meet the learning objective in the class. Setting up of communication is not easy, it requires various resources...
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