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Dismantling the Disabling Environments of Education: Disability Studies in Education


en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 apr 2019
Dismantling the Disabling Environments of Education: Creating New Cultures and Contexts for Accommodating Difference can be a valuable text for undergraduate and graduate courses in teacher education, as it addresses key issues of inclusion, diversity, equity, and differentiated approaches to educating the full range of students.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781433163159
ISBN-10: 1433163152
Pagini: 222
Dimensiuni: 150 x 225 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Peter Lang Copyright AG
Seria Disability Studies in Education


Notă biografică

Peter Smagorinsky is Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Language and Literacy Education in The University of Georgia's College of Education and Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico. At UGA he is the faculty advisor to the Journal of Language and Literacy Education, edited by doctoral students in his department. His experiences with Asperger's syndrome, chronic anxiety, and obsessive-compulsiveness have led to explorations of how to develop supportive contexts for neurodiversity, conducted through the lens provided by Vygotsky's work in defectology.

Joseph Tobin is The Elizabeth Gerrard Hall Professor of Early Childhood Education at The University of Georgia. Trained at the University of Chicago in anthropology and child development, his research centers on comparative studies of preschools in different cultures. Tobin's books include Preschool in Three Cultures (1989) and Preschool in Three Cultures Revisited (2009) and (with Akiko Hayashi) Teaching Embodied: Japanese Preschool Teaching as Cultural Practice (2015). He recently led a research project on "Deaf Kindergarten's in Three Countries: France, Japan, and the United States."

Kyunghwa Lee is Associate Professor of Early Childhood Education in the Department of Educational Theory and Practice at The University of Georgia. A former kindergarten teacher from South Korea, Lee examines various sociocultural constraints, including taken-for-granted beliefs and practices that support and hinder teaching and learning in early schooling. Her recent research has focused on investigating early childhood teachers' beliefs about typical and atypical child development in general and their perspectives on and practices for young children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in particular.


Cuprins

Peter Smagorinsky / Joseph Tobin / Kyunghwa Lee: Introduction - Curt Dudley-Marling: Learning Disabilities: Theory Matters - Peter Smagorinsky: Vygotsky, "Defectology," and the Russian/Soviet Approach to Human Difference - Gina Marie Applebee: Blind and in Technicolor: A Personal Account of Adaptation - Dorothy Bossman: On Becoming a Number: Lessons Learned While Adjusting to Life with Multiple Sclerosis - Usree Bhattacharya: "There is nothing to do with these girls": The Education of Girls with Rett Syndrome - Christopher Bass: Confronting My Disabling Pedagogy: Reconstructing an English/Language Arts Classroom as an Enabling Context - Kyunghwa Lee / Jaehee Kwon / Jooeun Oh: Refusing to Become a Drifter: A Preschooler's Resistance to the Transition to a Special Education Classroom - Melissa Sherfinski / Sera Mathew: Negotiating the Culture of Expertise: Experiences of Families of Children with Mild Autism and Other Sensory/Behavioral Differences - Jennifer Hensley / Patrick Graham / Joseph Tobin: Learning from Deaf Education - Xiaoying Zhao: Schools as Asylums: A Case Study of a Girl with OCD - Gail Boldt / Joseph Michael Valente: The Emotional Work of Inclusion: Living within Difference at L'Ecole Gulliver - Contributor Biographies - Index.