The Least Restrictive Environment

Author:

Rueda Robert1,Gallego Margaret A.2,Moll Luis C.3

Affiliation:

1. University of Southern California

2. School of Teacher Education

3. University of Arizona

Abstract

One of the fundamental values built in to current special education practice is the notion of equity for students with disabilities. In a review regarding the least restrictive environment (LRE), Yell (1995) said, "LRE is a principle stating that students with disabilities are to be educated in settings as close to regular classes as appropriate for the child" (p. 193). Although almost all stakeholders agree with these goals in principle, there is significant and heated debate in the professional community about how to achieve these goals. Much of the discussion on LRE seems to reflect a specific place-a physical context such as the general education classroom. In this article, we draw on a sociocultural framework to propose an expanded view of LRE. Specifically, we argue that a focus on the physical setting is not the most appropriate unit of analysis. Rather, we suggest that the same placement or setting can be either facilitating or restrictive, depending on the social organization of specific activity settings that comprise a given context. A different view is provided by sociocultural theory, which proposes a unit of analysis that includes the individual in interaction with a specific activity setting.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Education

Reference25 articles.

1. Ashton, P. (1996). The concept of activity. In L. Dixon-Krauss (Ed.), Vygotsky in the classroom: Mediated literacy instruction and assessment. (pp. 111-124). White Plains, NY: Longman.

2. Effects of Participation in the Fifth Dimension on Far Transfer

3. Research on Teaching and Teacher Research: The Issues That Divide

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