Teachers are increasingly challenged by dilemmas of practice as they negotiate their commitments to equity for students from historically marginalized communities, including students with disabilities, against the demands of their school settings. This book seeks to understand the ways in which teachers’ engagements with their schooling contexts evoke varied forms of inclusive practice. It narrates the experiences of seven novice teachers who entered the field deeply committed to inclusive practice. It documents their conflicts, joys and struggles within the collectivities in which they were embedded. In doing thus, the book discloses the many unpredictable trajectories of practice that encompass the complex work of teaching for inclusion.
Introduction – Taiyo Ebato: A Male Teacher of Color: Filling the Void – Molly Goodell: Negotiating the Cruel Optimisms of Inclusivity – Peter Reitzfeld: Recognizing Success, Deferring Competence – Harley Jones: Stories of a Feminist Killjoy Inclusive Educator – Adam Kuranishi: Searching for an Activist- Educator Self: Towards a DisCrit Classroom Ecology – Rena Matsushita: Absurdities and Contradictions: Teaching against Oneself – Reflections on Agentive Maneuverings – Index.
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Srikala Naraian is Associate Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University and Program Director of the Elementary Inclusive Education Program. She is the author of Teaching for Inclusion: Eight Principles for Effective and Equitable Practice.
Sarah L. Schlessinger is Assistant Professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning in the School of Education Long Island University–Brooklyn and Program Coordinator of the Adolescent and Childhood Special Education Programs.