Children’s Books about Inclusion Save Ben’s Adventures: Ben uses a wheelchair, but that doesn’t define him. Strong messages ofacceptanceandinclusion, friendship, and family make the Ben’s Adventures series perfect for introducing the concept of disabilities, and for teaching young kids that pe...
This website is filled with tools to help children without disabilities realize that children with disabilities are kids, just like them.
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The Polka-Dotted Penguin is a children's book about inclusion and kindness through the eyes of a baby penguin, and teaches kids that being different can be great. This book was written based on the author's experience with her daughter who has Down sy
The Arabic Quiltis a compassionate and feel-good book for immigrant children who are bilingual and starting a new school. They want so badly to fit in with and be accepted by the other children, even though they may dress a little differently and bring an ethnic lunch from home. ...
Increasing or varying the types of materials available to children is another way to make the classroom more inclusive. This paper proposes a new approach for fostering interaction and inclusion development during shared reading. We sought to increase the interactivity of traditional tale books by ...
Students are often sharing a computer with a sibling as they are“in class”at home alongside a parent for part of the week and in school learning for other days. Some co-teachers are also juggling how to support their own children who are learning remotely from home. Some parents or care...
For me, as a mom, it's so important that my kids read diverse books in school and at home. Diverse books allows children to see that there is not one variation of what it means to be human. We're all different, and representing that really well in books helps children to develop an...
“During quarantine the whole HR team would call regularly just to check how I and my family were doing – they could have said, ‘OK, he’s left us now’ but they didn’t. And here in Aberdeen the HR team dropped off food and so many toys and books for my children. That’s wha...
However, to think of the practice of sport as a human right is misleading and potentially unhelpful to the true inclusion of children with disability in sport. The various permutations of a human right to sport—a right in sport; a right to participate in sport; a right to the practice ...