Educating Children and Young People with Acquired Brain Injury
£30.40
Educating Children with Acquired Brain Injury is an authoritative resource book on the effects of brain injury on young people and how educators can understand and support their needs. This new edition has been updated to reflect changes to legislation and practice relating to special educational needs and will enable you to maximise the learning opportunities for young people with acquired brain injury (ABI). Considering key areas in special educational needs such as communication, interaction, cognition, sensory and physical needs, the book provides information on the multifaceted needs of children and young people with ABI and how these needs can be met.
This book will help you to:
- Understand the difficulties that young people with ABI experience
- Support these students by using appropriate strategies to help their learning
- Understand and address the social and emotional difficulties experienced by these students
- Work in partnership with families and other professionals
- Understand information from other professionals by reference to a glossary of terms
- Access further useful information from relevant resources and organisations
Written for SENCOs, teachers, teaching assistants, educational psychologists and other education professionals across all settings, Educating Children with Acquired Brain Injury is full of useful information and advice for parents and other family members, clinical and behavioural psychologists, therapists and support workers involved with children and young people with ABI.
Read more
Additional information
Publisher | 2nd edition (17 Jan. 2018), Routledge |
---|---|
Language | English |
Paperback | 186 pages |
ISBN-10 | 1138211028 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1138211025 |
Dimensions | 18.9 x 1.07 x 24.61 cm |
by Miss729
SEN/ALN Children’s Rights Education (UK) is just one of the many, never ending battles that parents/carers etc goes through.
This Book explores more than just Education it reflects key areas in day to day life.
For Example: Statement of Educational Needs: The authors gives you a much better understanding of what has been written about the child on such an important document. Let alone, what should really be written. It gives the confidence to parents etc, that those involved with a child with ABI doesn’t compare it with other terms of SEN/ALN and so much more.