ABSTRACT

Global Directions in Inclusive Education pushes the conceptual boundaries of ‘inclusive education’ and explores new ways to research and envision inclusion and diversity in education for all children. This pioneering book problematizes ‘inclusive education’ as a global currency, as another form of deficit-thinking, and as a universal application.

The expert team of international contributors argue that much of the field of inclusive education needs a reinvigoration of new ideas, critical introspection, and ways of knowing that can overcome the well-worn deficit paths of inclusive education study, namely: ‘barriers’ to inclusion, teacher attitudes, policy-practice gaps, lack of resources, and lack of teacher training. Seeking diverse ways forward that represent new visions and innovations from around the world, this text features voices and ideas from both early career and established scholars, to enliven debate and promote a more positive and productive dialogue.

Global Directions in Inclusive Education is ideal for students, researchers, and scholars of inclusive education; development practitioners seeking new ideas; and practitioners seeking to gain a deeper and more global understanding of inclusive education both in theory and in practice.

part I|89 pages

Conceptual innovation

chapter 3|21 pages

Beginning with language

Inclusive education strategies with sign languages in Rwanda, Singapore, United States, and Việt Nam

chapter 4|15 pages

Affects and materiality in Santiago de Chile's schools

The importance of relationality in the co-enactment of inclusion

chapter 6|17 pages

Is inclusive education enough for Australian Aboriginal students?

Making the case for belonging education to disrupt the normalised agenda of assimilation

part II|98 pages

Pragmatic innovation

chapter 7|16 pages

Visibly rewarding learners for academic achievement

The guise of excellence

chapter 8|16 pages

Diagnosis, integration, and inclusion

The experiences of schools and families in Cambodian policy and practice

chapter 9|18 pages

Talking about self

Exploring the potential of teacher's talk in professional learning communities for inclusive pedagogy

chapter 10|14 pages

Localizing a universal claim

Applying universal design strategies to support inclusion in Armenia

chapter 12|15 pages

Re-turning insights on belonging

An international collaboration between Flanders and New Zealand

part III|97 pages

chapter 13|14 pages

Being seen and heard

Using photovoice methodology in inclusive education research

chapter 15|21 pages

Into the mesa

A case study of Jordanian inclusion policy

chapter 16|17 pages

Becoming an activist

A story of parental advocacy for inclusive education