McDonough’s adaptation to Carlos Islam and Chris Mares

 

Question 1 (15 Marks)

• Compare McDonough’s adaptation to Carlos Islam and Chris Mares (paper attached) in the areas of reasons for adaptation and techniques. (5 Marks each)
• In your own personal experience as a language leaner write 5 points where you find the technique of adding may help the language learner. (5 Marks)

 

Questions 2 (10 Marks)

• You learned about materials evaluation from your course book by McDonough, find another evaluation written in this area by Brian Tomlinson (be it an article or a chapter from a book) and write points of similarities and differences total of 10 points. Attach the article of the chapter you considered to answer the question.

Sample Solution

Immediately, after passing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 by the General Assembly, the educational privileges of those with mental or physical disability have been receiving ever increasing attention around the globe. As per Alexander & Salmon (1995), to make sure that special education is children’s privilege to receive an education which needs allocating them with separate class and provision of other learning material supports. As per Nathanson (1998) since the children are unequal, they need unequal treatment and hence, additional resources should be offered for helping children with learning difficulties.

According to World Health Organisation (2010) ‘Disability is an umbrella term covering impairments, activity limitations and participation restrictions. Impairment is a problem in body function or structure: an activity limitation is a difficulty in executing a task or action: while a participation restriction is a problem experienced by an individual in involvement in life situations’
Ofsted (2010) produced figures that suggested that about 1 in 5 or 1.7 million students were classified as having Special Educational Needs. This figure encompasses those students who are also defined as disabled under the Equality Act of 2010. Estimates of the proportion of children with a disability vary but recent analysis indicates that 7 per cent of children in England are disabled. There is a significant overlap between disabled children and those with SEN. Research suggests that around three-quarters of disabled children also have SEN and will currently be receiving support through the SEN system. Plus, SEN labelling can create low self-esteem and can deteriorate succeeding results, labelling students of ‘special needs’ frequently persuades school management to treat them differently and separately instead of perusing them in regular class. To treat them differently and separately are considered to be the handicap present in the existing SEN system. The introduction of The Equality Act 2010 sought to eliminate those elements within schools of treating SEN students differently and separately. Through the requirements of anti-discrimination measures, reasonable adjustments and treating disabled and SEN students more fa

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