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Dive into the research topics where Phil Bayliss is active.

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Featured researches published by Phil Bayliss.


Teaching and Teacher Education | 2000

Student teachers’ attitudes towards the inclusion of children with special educational needs in the ordinary school

Elias Avramidis; Phil Bayliss; Robert Burden

Abstract Given that research has suggested that the successful implementation of any inclusive policy is largely dependent on educators being positive about it, a survey was undertaken into the attitudes of student teachers toward the inclusion of children with special needs in the ordinary school. The sample was comprised of 135 students who were completing their teacher training courses at a university School of Education. The analysis revealed that the respondents held positive attitudes toward the general concept of inclusion but their perceived competence dropped significantly according to the severity of childrens needs as identified by the UK “Code of Practice for the Identification and Assessment of Special Educational Needs”. Moreover, children with emotional and behavioural difficulties were seen as potentially causing more concern and stress than those with other types of special needs. Finally, the survey raised issues about the breadth and quality of initial teacher training in the UK. Nevertheless, the recommendations provided at the end of this paper regarding teacher training are applicable beyond the UK context.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2002

Inclusion in action: an in-depth case study of an effective inclusive secondary school in the south-west of England

Elias Avramidis; Phil Bayliss; Robert Burden

This paper represents the outcomes of an in-depth case study of a secondary school in the south-west of England, identified as inclusive by the local education authority (LEA). The study, which formed the second part of a ‘bricolage’ approach, utilized ethnographic research methods, with the aim of investigating inclusion in a holistic way, at the school level. Data were collected through interviewing of a variety of school constituencies and participant observation. The analysis suggested that: (a) the participants were enculturated into the integration model; (b) although there were strong perceived academic benefits for the included students, the evidence is contradictory regarding the social outcomes of inclusion; (c) successful implementation of inclusion requires restructuring of the physical environment, resources, organizational changes and instructional adaptations; and (d) there was a perceived need for ongoing professional development. The findings reported in this investigation may be used to illuminate current practice in the LEA and to provide directions for formulating policies to support ‘inclusive practice’ in ways which are acceptable to teachers, parents and students.


Disability & Society | 2008

Postmodern synergistic knowledge creation: extending the boundaries of disability studies

Ben Simmons; Theo D Blackmore; Phil Bayliss

The tensions between the competing discourses of the medical and the social models of disability have traditionally provided a platform for discussion and research in the fields of disability studies and special needs education. Over the last 30 years a wealth of literature has consolidated the debate and produced particular knowledge of impairment and disability. In this paper we argue that by privileging notions of ‘deficit’ within these medical or social model perspectives the richness of the lived experience of people with impairments is denied. The individual becomes lost within a framework of medical symptoms or social inequalities. This paper considers alternative approaches which reveal a fuller picture of the lives of people with impairments. The authors conducted two separate empirical studies, one employing a Deleuzo‐Guattarian perspective, the other a Bourdieusian perspective. In this paper we illustrate how these theories of practice can reveal situated understandings of the individual with impairments and his/her daily life. By embracing new understandings and different theoretical perspectives we show how new knowledge can emerge to illuminate the fluid and ever‐changing notions of ‘disability’, ‘inclusion’ and ‘exclusion’, which form elements of the individual lived experience of the research participants.


Anthropological Journal of European Cultures | 2010

Cosmologies and Lifestyles: A Cultural Ecological Framework and Its Implications for Education Systems

Phil Bayliss; Patrick Dillon

This paper opens with a critique of the majoritarian, post-Enlightenment, scientific worldview, the assumptions it makes about human cosmologies and lifestyles and how, in turn, these assumptions influence the nature of educational systems. The critique focuses on how the experiences of minority cultures, particularly those cultures that are nomadic or pastoralist, challenge some of the fundamental premises of majoritarian education. There follows a cultural ecological framing which compares the ways in which western (majoritarian) cultures and minoritarian cultures contextualise education. In western educational situations, structures, contexts and schemata are substantially pre-defined, and we talk about things as ‘context-dependent’, since context is something that can be described as the backdrop to behaviour. In minoritarian cultures both meaning and context emerge from people’s interactions with their environments and may subsequently be described. These are respectively relational and co-constitutional manifestations of situations. The manifestations are different, not oppositional or mutually exclusive. We present an ecological framework in an attempt to simultaneously embrace both interpretations.


International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education | 2013

Pond life that ‘know their place’: exploring teaching and learning support assistants’ experiences through positioning theory

Debbie L Watson; Phil Bayliss; Glynis Pratchett

Teaching and learning support assistants (TLSAs) are notoriously underpaid and undervalued as members of school workforces in England and elsewhere in the world, where the discourse of support has worked to legitimize their poor status. This article reports and explores empirical findings through the lens of positioning theory. This theoretical approach has revealed ways in which the positions occupied by TLSAs are consolidated in social acts and discursive practices that contribute to a narrative that is shared and understood by those positioned and those positioning. The multiplicity of, and sometimes competing, positions occupied by TLSAs are revealed through different readings of the collective storylines of pond life and knowing one’s place that determine a set of social and occupational practices. These serve to illustrate the discursive fights TLSAs were engaged in to assert their professionalism in schools and to challenge their low status.


Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties | 1998

AN ENQUIRY INTO CHILDREN WITH EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIOURAL DIFFICULTIES IN TWO SCHOOLS IN THE SOUTHWEST OF ENGLAND

Elias Avramidis; Phil Bayliss

This study is concerned with investigating the problem of difficult behaviour in schools. The study investigated what constitutes “disruptive” behaviour and explored teachers’ perceptions in two schools, a mainstream and a special, in the Southwest of England. The research used semi‐structured interviews which were carried out in the two settings and analysis of the data revealed that emotional and behavioural difficulties are still perceived as something that the individual has and, moreover, the interviewees put too much a heavy emphasis on the socio‐economic background of the children. The recommendations provided at the end of this paper, are made on the grounds that schools can do a lot to improve their practice and that all students benefit from circumstances conducive to supporting pupils with disruptive behaviour.


Educational Psychology | 2000

A Survey into Mainstream Teachers' Attitudes Towards the Inclusion of Children with Special Educational Needs in the Ordinary School in one Local Education Authority

Elias Avramidis; Phil Bayliss; Robert Burden


British Journal of Special Education | 2007

The Role of Special Schools for Children with Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulties: Is Segregation Always Best?.

Ben Simmons; Phil Bayliss


Transtext(e)s Transcultures 跨文本跨文化. Journal of Global Cultural Studies | 2008

What Constitutes ‘Context’ in Sociocultural Research? How the Mongolian Experience Challenges Theory

Patrick Dillon; Phil Bayliss; Ines Stolpe; Linda Bayliss


Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies | 2009

Against Interpretosis: Deleuze, Disability, and Difference

Phil Bayliss

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Patrick Dillon

University of Eastern Finland

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