video record
Media not available in the Digital Archive
Description
Band 6: This band is adapted from an ILEA video called 'Motherland', tracing the experiences of immigrants to this country in the 1950's as an oral history project which turned into a musical drama...tisation. -- Band 7: This band looks at the work of Springfield Road Junior School, Derbyshire, where a unit for physically-handicapped pupils sits alongside the main school buildings and pupils and staff move freely between the two. -- Band 8: The final band looks at the attempt in Fife to ease the sometimes disruptive transition between primary and secondary schools using 'workbases' for some pupils: and at the organisational and personal consequences for pupils and staff.
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Module code and title: E806, Applied studies in learning difficulties in education
Item code: E806; VCR3
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:23:30
+ Show more...
Track listing:
track listing for this programme
Track 1 Band 6: This band is adapted from an ILEA video called 'Motherland', tracing the experiences of immigrants to this country in the 1950's as an oral history project which turned into a musical dramatisation.
Track 2 Band 7: This band looks at the work of Springfield Road Junior School, Derbyshire, where a unit for physically-handicapped pupils sits alongside the main school buildings and pupils and staff move freely between the two.
Track 3 Band 8: The final band looks at the attempt in Fife to ease the sometimes disruptive transition between primary and secondary schools using 'workbases' for some pupils: and at the organisational and personal consequences for pupils and staff.
Producer: Ed Milner
Contributor: Patricia Potts
Publisher: BBC Open University
Keyword(s): 1950's; Children; Derbyshire; Handicapped; ILEA; Immergrants; Junior School; Motherland; Musical dramatisation; Springfield Road
Master spool number: HOU5580
Production number: HOU5580
Videofinder number: 2898
Available to public: no