“…This wicked problem includes, for example : unhelpful calls for return to what might be described as traditional teaching practices and a regressive return to the ‘normative centre’ of education (Florian, ); greater segregation (or exclusion) of students affected by disability on account of their perceived negative impact on school or cohort achievement data (Norwich, ; Slee, ); exclusion of data from students with a disability in data‐led processes or initiatives designed to monitor the quality of educational provision; responding to evidence suggesting that increasing numbers of students affected by disability are being placed into segregated settings (Anderson and Boyle, ; Valle, Connor, Broderick, et al., ); increased reliance on strict categorical labels to access funding for additional support or intervention; reduced tolerance for non‐compliant, disruptive or challenging behaviour (‘three strikes’ model) and greater use of educational exclusion in response (Gibbs and Powell, ; Theriot, Craun and Dupper, ); greater emphasis in policy upon the notions of discipline and the merits of an orderly classroom (DFE, ); concerns about the unintended consequence of greater emphasis upon student performance and formal ‘accountability assessments’ (NAPLAN, TIMMS, SATS) as measures of educational progress (Cumming and Dickson, ); a narrowing of the curriculum and the corresponding loss of alternative spaces for educational achievement by students with disability (Darling‐Hammond, ; Waitoller and Thorius, ); reduced capacity by professionals and by schools to provide the additional support necessary for the success of students with a disability due to elevated occupational pressures and increased administrative workloads generated by neo‐liberal educational policies (Valle, Connor, Broderick, et al., ); research which indicates the numerous negative effects of ‘increased focus on individual teacher performance’ (Martins, , p. 25) and its potentially magnified impact on, often psychologically vulnerable students with a disability; and, finally in classrooms increasingly focused upon curriculum‐referenced academic output how do professionals ensure that there are vital but time‐consuming opportunities for agency and meaningful participation by students with a disability (Browne and Millar, ).…”