Inside the ’Inclusive’ Early Childhood Classroom

Inside the ’Inclusive’ Early Childhood Classroom
The Power of the 'Normal'
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Artikel-Nr:
9781433134333
Veröffentl:
2017
Einband:
HC gerader Rücken kaschiert
Erscheinungsdatum:
03.05.2017
Seiten:
220
Autor:
Karen Watson
Gewicht:
464 g
Format:
231x155x17 mm
Serie:
5, Childhood Studies
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Karen Watson is Lecturer in Early Childhood Education at the University of Newcastle, Australia. Her more than 30 years of teaching experience in a variety of contexts, including early childhood classrooms and early intervention services, inspired her PhD research on inclusive practice. Awarded her doctorate in 2015, she is interested in how young children actively negotiate difference in their everyday encounters with each other.

Inside the 'Inclusive' Childhood Classroom: The Power of the 'Normal' offers a critique of current practices and alternative view of inclusion. The rich data created inside three classrooms will challenge those who work in the field, as the children and their performances, previously overlooked, are foreground. Although at times confronting, it is ultimately invaluable reading for classroom teachers, students, academics, and researchers as well as anyone who desires to deepen their understanding of inclusive processes. The inclusion of children with diagnosed special needs in mainstream early childhood classrooms is a policy and practice that has gained universal support in recent decades. Exploring ways to include the diagnosed child has been of interest to inclusive research. Adopting a poststructural perspective, this book interrupts taken for granted assumptions about inclusive processes in the classroom. Attention is drawn to the role played by the undiagnosed children, those positioned as already included. Researching among children, this ethnography interrogates the production of the classroom 'normal'. As the children negotiate difference, the operations of the 'normal' are made visible in their words and actions. In their encounters with the diagnosed Other, they take up practices of tolerance and silence, effecting fear, separation, and a desire to cure. These performances echo practices, presumed abandoned, from centuries past. As a way forward this book urges a rethink of practice-as-usual, as these effects are problematic for inclusion and not sustainable. A greater scrutiny of the 'normal' is needed, as the power it exercises, impacts on all children and how they become subjects in the classroom.

Inside the "Inclusive" Childhood Classroom: The Power of the "Normal" offers a critique of current practices and alternative view of inclusion.

Acknowledgements - Introduction: Questioning My 'Truth' about Inclusion - Troubling Inclusion: Policy and Practice - Doing Poststructural Ethnography Inside the 'Inclusive' Classroom - Exploring the Production, Reproduction and Maintenance of the 'Normal' - Exploring the Role of Non-Human Actors in the Production and Maintenance of the 'Normal' - Disrupting Tolerance as a Practice - Nuanced Silences and Their Effects - Fear, Separation and Asylum-Like Practices - Rethinking 'Inclusive' Practice: Shifting the Focus - Index.

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