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Q. 7. 15 Of 20 Respondents Had Not Seen A Significant Improvement In Their ...

Q. 7. 15 of 20 respondents had not seen a significant improvement in their housing situation since 2001; (of these 15, five living with parents or in their own home.)
Q. 8. 18 of 20 interviewees did not feel that they were more integrated into mainstream society because of the measures introduced by the government; 14 of 18 thought that their present integration was superficial rather than actual.
Q. 9. 19 of 20 interviewees replied that access to government funding was hopelessly complicated and bureaucratic, and that money could be better spent directly upon the key provisions of housing, health, education etc., .
Q. 10. 17 of 20 respondents agreed that funding could be substantially improved and made more efficient if bureaucracy was slashed and red-tape burnt.


Section 5: Conclusion

In the final analysis, the researcher has to confess not a little surprise at the findings of this investigation. At the outset of a research project one begins with a set of hypotheses that one assumes will have approximate validity at the end of that research, being changed only in relatively minor ways by the actual results obtained during the course of that research.

The surprise arising from the present investigation thus refers to actual results that are almost wholly opposite to those expectations with which the research began. Led in by glossy report pages, by stylishly presented statistics, by soundbites, by headlines, and by the ever-flowing stream of honeyed government rhetoric, the researcher undoubtedly built out of these sweet-flitting impressions an initial picture of the subject of learning disability funding that was illusory, and which had no more substance to it than do the slogans of which it was born. Reading the government literature on the subject of learning disability provision one might very easily take the impression that Valuing People has been a vital and pure success. Make a fleeting browse of the Department of Health website and your eye will quickly fall on one of many quotations from government officials commending the excellence and the deep efficacy of the reforms instigated by Tony Blair's 2001 white paper.

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