What is it about?

This paper presents the key findings of the Keeping Connected study and focuses on the challenging process of re-imagining a hospital setting as a community of learning for young people in light of these findings. The paper focuses on young people as learners within the overarching themes emanating from the Keeping Connected research such as normalcy, diversity and communication. Taking up Slee's notion of ‘the irregular school’, we describe how one setting in a large urban paediatric hospital in Victoria, Australia, is transforming the way in which children and young people are supported to maintain their connectedness to learning. We reflect on the evidence of the Keeping Connected project to inform the ways in which a hospital can respond to young people's needs as learners and offer a model of inclusion as a form of cultural change in this important out-of-school setting. Directions for future research are also offered.

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This page is a summary of: Embedding learning in a paediatric hospital: changing practice and keeping connected, International Journal of Inclusive Education, February 2013, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/13603116.2012.752877.
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