Keeping Our Difficult Kids in School: The Impact of the Use of the ‘Boxall Profile’ on the Transition and Integration of Behaviourally - Disordered Students in Primary Schools

This paper discusses the Boxall Profile as an assessment and intervention framework designedto support disadvantaged children in mainstream schools. The Boxall Profile was developed in the 1970s in the United Kingdom by Marjorie Boxall to identify children who had come into school unprepared to meet...

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Veröffentlicht in:Kairaranga 2014-07, Vol.15 (2), p.25-35
Hauptverfasser: Allison, Judy, Craig, Shirley
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description This paper discusses the Boxall Profile as an assessment and intervention framework designedto support disadvantaged children in mainstream schools. The Boxall Profile was developed in the 1970s in the United Kingdom by Marjorie Boxall to identify children who had come into school unprepared to meet the demands of classroom life and needed support in a nurture group. The nurture group provided the emotional/social support the children needed to prepare them for mainstream classes. The Boxall Profile shows how the processes of early child development play a central role in a child’s ability to learn and succeed at school. It helps teachers in mainstream school to understand the emotional problems that lie behind difficult behaviour. A case study example demonstrates how the Boxall Profile provides evidence of deficit in social and emotional competence when attachment has been disrupted and a child has experienced trauma, neglect or abuse.
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subjects Academic Ability
Attachment Behavior
Behavior Change
Behavior Disorders
Case Studies
Child Abuse
Child Development
Child Neglect
Classroom Techniques
Diagnostic Tests
Disadvantaged
Elementary School Students
Emotional Development
Emotional Disturbances
Intervention
Profiles
Scores
Social Development
Social Support Groups
Trauma
title Keeping Our Difficult Kids in School: The Impact of the Use of the ‘Boxall Profile’ on the Transition and Integration of Behaviourally - Disordered Students in Primary Schools
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