Journal Articles
'A Luxury for the First World': A western perception of Hong Kong Chinese attitudes towards inclusive education
- 'A Luxury for the First World': A western perception of Hong Kong Chinese attitudes towards inclusive education
- Disability & Society, 13(1), 113-124, 1998
- Routledge
- 1998
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- Hong Kong
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- 1997.7 onwards
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- Primary Education
- Secondary Education
- The debates I explore in this article were prompted by conversations I had with a Government Education Inspector who accompanied me on a visit to a primary school and participated in a series of workshops I organised while I was on a fellowship at Hong Kong University. May Lee's challenge to me that a non-selective education system was a luxury only the First World could afford provoked me into acknowledging a whole new dimension for our discussions of the function of segregated education for groups excluded from the mainstream. I begin by introducing the education system in Hong Kong as it was in the early 1990s. Then I go on, and discuss the activities and conversations I shared with May Lee. Patterns of inclusion and exclusion in Hong Kong reflect a deeply-respected concept of a `good school'; special schools and classes are the only settings for the provision of additional learning support. I discuss examples of each. Finally, I discuss inclusion in education in the context of a developing country, drawing on the work of Chinese, Indian and Western writers to assess May Lee's claim. Opinion is divided. I conclude that the force of an international rhetoric of inclusion obscures the continuing operation of a cultural commitment to selection.[Copyright of Disability & Society is the property of Routledge. Full article may be available at the publisher's website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09687599826948 ]
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- English
- Journal Articles
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- 09687599
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/e7e9fb71
- 2010-09-06
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