ABSTRACT

Imagination for Inclusion offers a reconsideration of the ways in which imagination engages and empowers learners across the education spectrum, from primary to adult levels and in all subject areas. Imagination as a natural, expedient, and exciting learning tool should be central to any approach to developing and implementing curriculum, but is increasingly undervalued as learners progress through the education system; this disregards not only imagination’s potential, but its paramount place in informing truly inclusive approaches to teaching and learning.

This book presents a new theory of imagination and includes discussion about its application to teaching and learning to increase the engagement of disaffected students and reinvigorate their relationships with curriculum content. Chapters include key ideas and discussion surrounding the benefits of introducing imaginative practices into the classroom for learners from a range of marginalised backgrounds, such as young people with disabilities and adult learners from socio-economically disadvantaged environments. In exploring imagination in the practice of inclusive education, the book includes chapters from researchers and practitioners in education who have fresh ideas about how learners and teachers have benefited from introducing imaginative pedagogies.

The diverse collection, featuring writers with backgrounds from early childhood to adult education, will be essential reading for academics and researchers in the fields of education, inclusive education, social policy, professional development, teacher education and creativity. It will be of particular interest to current and pre-service teachers who want to develop inclusive practice and increase the engagement of all students with formal education.

chapter Chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Reimagining imagination

part I|40 pages

Fantasy

chapter |3 pages

“Why is it so?”

An introduction to fantasy

chapter Chapter 2|13 pages

Playful pedagogies

Promoting active learning through play and imagination in the early years of school

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

Petting zoos and little dark spaces

Fantasy to inform school design

chapter Chapter 4|10 pages

Letters of gratitude

A pedagogy of hope for teachers of young people with disabilities

part II|42 pages

Creative imagination

chapter |2 pages

Up the creek without a metaphor

An introduction to creative imagination

chapter Chapter 5|14 pages

“Just use your imagination”

A teacher educator's explorations of assessment

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Creativity for engagement and inclusion

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

Imagining ourselves as twenty-first-century learners

Making space to learn

part III|46 pages

Critical imagination

chapter |3 pages

“And keep your eyes wide”

An introduction to critical imagination

chapter Chapter 10|13 pages

Feeling futures

The embodied imagination and intensive time

part IV|44 pages

Empathic imagination

chapter |3 pages

Crossing the empty spaces

An introduction to empathic imagination

chapter Chapter 11|13 pages

Ethical imagination and the inclusive education agenda

The case of low-income countries

chapter Chapter 12|13 pages

Imagination for inclusion

Shared understandings across diverse contexts of educational practice

chapter Chapter 13|13 pages

From stone to stone across the unknown sea

chapter |3 pages

Afterword

The challenge of imagination for inclusion