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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Inclusive education’s promises and trajectories: Critical notes about future research on a venerable idea

TLDR
In this paper, the authors discuss issues germane to conceptual clarity and the ways in which inclusive education interacts with reforms that share equity goals, noting disruptions and unintended consequences that arise at the nexus of these reforms.
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to offer critical notes on inclusive education research in the U.S. We discuss issues germane to conceptual clarity and the ways in which inclusive education interacts with reforms that share equity goals, noting disruptions and unintended consequences that arise at the nexus of these reforms. In addition, we identify enduring challenges and paradoxes in this research literature. These include sampling issues, an emphasis on where students are placed as a proxy for inclusive education vis-a-vis inclusive education as the transformation of educational systems, the ways in which outcome measures have been examined in this research, and the need for and challenges of building strategic alliances that could advance an inclusive education agenda. We conclude with reflections and suggestions for a future research program that include sharpening inclusion’s identity, attending to the fluid nature of ability differences and students’ multiple identities, broadening the unit of analysis to systems of activities, and documenting processes and outcomes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The New York Review of Books

TL;DR: The New York Review ofBooks as mentioned in this paper is now over twenty years old and it has attracted controversy since its inception, but it is the controversies that attract the interest of the reader and to which the history, especially an admittedly impressionistic survey, must give some attention.

Le droit à l’inclusion: Droit et identitité dans les récits de vie des personnes handicapées aux États-Unit (translation of: Rights of Inclusion: law and identity in the life stories of Americans with disabilities)

TL;DR: Engel and Munger as mentioned in this paper conducted interviews with intended beneficiaries of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to understand how rights and identity affect one another over time and how that interaction ultimately determines the success of laws such as the ADA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Objects of Protection, Enduring Nodes of Difference: Disability Intersections With “Other” Differences, 1916 to 2016

TL;DR: In this paper, a cultural-historical analytical perspective on disability and its intersections is presented, with the assumption that disability is socially, historically, and spatially con-tional.
References
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Book

Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences

TL;DR: In Sorting Things Out, Bowker and Star as mentioned in this paper explore the role of categories and standards in shaping the modern world and examine how categories are made and kept invisible, and how people can change this invisibility when necessary.
Journal ArticleDOI

The New York Review of Books

TL;DR: The New York Review ofBooks as mentioned in this paper is now over twenty years old and it has attracted controversy since its inception, but it is the controversies that attract the interest of the reader and to which the history, especially an admittedly impressionistic survey, must give some attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences

TL;DR: The authors present fascinating history and insights into the development of various classification systems and identify issues that arise during the creation of any classification system, such as the need to compromise between providing granular classifications that satisfy needs specific to a time and place.
Journal ArticleDOI

Public Goods, Private Goods: The American Struggle Over Educational Goals

TL;DR: The authors explores three alternative goals for American education that have been at the root of educational conflicts over the years: democratic equality, social efficiency, and social mobility, which represent, respectively, the educational perspective of the citizen, the taxpayer, and the consumer.
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