"Compelling, controversial and confrontational, it is a brilliant addition to the inclusion or, as some argue, the illusion debate..."
The Teacher, October 2008
Another special school faces closure. Why does its head teacher attempt to take her own life? And what is the impact of this on those around her?
A human story in a piece of fiction brings to life dry-as-dust issues that are important in education and, maybe, are even more important beyond it.
About 100 Special Schools have been closed in the UK since 1997. The three main political parties endorsed the policy of “Inclusion”. Similar policies have been adopted in the USA and in other parts of the world. Today, however, people want the policy to work, but are asking whether it is doing so. Is it good for some children, bad for others? Should they be deprived of choice?
The play is a tragedy. And it is a polemic. It questions the overall wisdom of the dogma of “Inclusion” as well as its implementation.
It is unusual. It is a play, but it reads like a novel.. It is designed to encourage the reader to stop and to think. It questions assumptions about education, politics and religion.
• Which is the wiser mantra in education – Equality or Equity?
• How far does declaring a “Right” provide the protection of “a Right”?
• How do we reconcile a controlling society with participation?
• How do we get a more efficient, less wasteful system of government?
• How does a multicultural society live at peace with itself?
• Is this generation properly mindful of the legacy it is bequeathing?
Death of a Nightingale is an important read for all those who care about the future of the rising generation in school.