Description

Book Synopsis
Practicing Disability Studies in Education: Acting Toward Social Change celebrates the diversity of contemporary work being developed by a range of scholars working within the field of Disability Studies in Education (DSE). The central idea of this volume is to share ways in which educators practice DSE in creative and eclectic ways in order to rethink, reframe, and reshape the current educational response to disability. Largely confined to the limitations of traditional educational discourse, this collective (and growing) group continues to push limits, break molds, assert the need for plurality, explore possibilities, move into the unknown, take chances, strategize to destabilize, and co-create new visions for what can be, instead of settling for what is. Much like jazz musicians who rely upon one another on stage to create music collectively, these featured scholars have been and continue to riff with one another in creating the growing body of DSE literature. In sum, this

Trade Review
«This book offers a welcome and timely understanding of human differences which moves away from deficit-based and often derogatory assumptions, to understanding difference in historical, social, and cultural contexts. It demonstrates how DSE can create new understandings and bring about much-needed social change, and should be read by all those who wish to rethink current educational responses to disability.» (Sally Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, Oxford University)
«This text adds meanings to disability studies we didn’t know were there. It reveals the usefulness and potency of the field. It stretches and expands our thinking, our practice, and our actions.» (Simi Linton, author of Claiming Disability: Knowledge and Identity and co-producer and co-director of the documentary film Invitation to Dance)
«This book offers a welcome and timely understanding of human differences which moves away from deficit-based and often derogatory assumptions, to understanding difference in historical, social, and cultural contexts. It demonstrates how DSE can create new understandings and bring about much-needed social change, and should be read by all those who wish to rethink current educational responses to disability.» (Sally Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, Oxford University)
«This text adds meanings to disability studies we didn’t know were there. It reveals the usefulness and potency of the field. It stretches and expands our thinking, our practice, and our actions.» (Simi Linton, author of Claiming Disability: Knowledge and Identity and co-producer and co-director of the documentary film Invitation to Dance)

Table of Contents
Contents: Scot Danforth: Disability Studies in Education and the Sociological Imagination – David J. Connor/Jan W. Valle/Chris Hale: A Brief Account of How Disability Studies in Education Evolved – Deborah Gallagher: Exploring Some Moral Dimensions of the Social Model of Disability – Beth A. Ferri: «As a cripple, I swagger»: The Situated Body and Disability Studies in Education – Phil Smith: BEyon|ce|D inclusion: Wud mite[ymouse] be nexterated X – Jan W. Valle: Enacting Research: Disability Studies in Education and Performative Inquiry – Subini Ancy Annamma: «It was just like a piece of gum»: Using an Intersectional Approach to Understand Criminalizing Young Women of Color With Disabilities in the School-to-Prison Pipeline – Joseph Michael Valente: An «In-Betweener» Ethnographer: From Anxiety to Fieldwork Methods in a Cross-Cultural Study of Bilingual Deaf Kindergartners – David J. Connor: Practicing What We Teach: The Benefits of Using Disability Studies in an Inclusion Course – Geert Van Hove/Elisabeth De Schauwer: Why We Do What We (Think We) Do: Creating a Campus Coalition From the Perspective of Disability Studies in Education – Nirmala Erevelles: Madness and (Higher Education) Administration: Ethical Implications of Pedagogy Using Disability Studies Scholarship – Julie Allan: Critiquing Policy: Limitations and Possibilities – Missy Morton: Using Disability Studies in Education to Recognize, Resist, and Reshape Policy and Practices in Aotearoa New Zealand – Kathleen Collins: A Disability Studies in Education Analysis of Corporate-Based Educational Reform: Lessons From New Orleans – Jan W. Valle/Chris Hale/David J. Connor: All That Jazz: Using Disability Studies in Education to (Re)Envision the Applied Field of (Special) Education.

Practicing Disability Studies in Education

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    A Paperback by Jan W. Valle, Chris Hale

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      View other formats and editions of Practicing Disability Studies in Education by

      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/27/2014 12:11:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433125515, 978-1433125515
      ISBN10: 143312551X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Practicing Disability Studies in Education: Acting Toward Social Change celebrates the diversity of contemporary work being developed by a range of scholars working within the field of Disability Studies in Education (DSE). The central idea of this volume is to share ways in which educators practice DSE in creative and eclectic ways in order to rethink, reframe, and reshape the current educational response to disability. Largely confined to the limitations of traditional educational discourse, this collective (and growing) group continues to push limits, break molds, assert the need for plurality, explore possibilities, move into the unknown, take chances, strategize to destabilize, and co-create new visions for what can be, instead of settling for what is. Much like jazz musicians who rely upon one another on stage to create music collectively, these featured scholars have been and continue to riff with one another in creating the growing body of DSE literature. In sum, this

      Trade Review
      «This book offers a welcome and timely understanding of human differences which moves away from deficit-based and often derogatory assumptions, to understanding difference in historical, social, and cultural contexts. It demonstrates how DSE can create new understandings and bring about much-needed social change, and should be read by all those who wish to rethink current educational responses to disability.» (Sally Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, Oxford University)
      «This text adds meanings to disability studies we didn’t know were there. It reveals the usefulness and potency of the field. It stretches and expands our thinking, our practice, and our actions.» (Simi Linton, author of Claiming Disability: Knowledge and Identity and co-producer and co-director of the documentary film Invitation to Dance)
      «This book offers a welcome and timely understanding of human differences which moves away from deficit-based and often derogatory assumptions, to understanding difference in historical, social, and cultural contexts. It demonstrates how DSE can create new understandings and bring about much-needed social change, and should be read by all those who wish to rethink current educational responses to disability.» (Sally Tomlinson, Professor Emeritus, Oxford University)
      «This text adds meanings to disability studies we didn’t know were there. It reveals the usefulness and potency of the field. It stretches and expands our thinking, our practice, and our actions.» (Simi Linton, author of Claiming Disability: Knowledge and Identity and co-producer and co-director of the documentary film Invitation to Dance)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Scot Danforth: Disability Studies in Education and the Sociological Imagination – David J. Connor/Jan W. Valle/Chris Hale: A Brief Account of How Disability Studies in Education Evolved – Deborah Gallagher: Exploring Some Moral Dimensions of the Social Model of Disability – Beth A. Ferri: «As a cripple, I swagger»: The Situated Body and Disability Studies in Education – Phil Smith: BEyon|ce|D inclusion: Wud mite[ymouse] be nexterated X – Jan W. Valle: Enacting Research: Disability Studies in Education and Performative Inquiry – Subini Ancy Annamma: «It was just like a piece of gum»: Using an Intersectional Approach to Understand Criminalizing Young Women of Color With Disabilities in the School-to-Prison Pipeline – Joseph Michael Valente: An «In-Betweener» Ethnographer: From Anxiety to Fieldwork Methods in a Cross-Cultural Study of Bilingual Deaf Kindergartners – David J. Connor: Practicing What We Teach: The Benefits of Using Disability Studies in an Inclusion Course – Geert Van Hove/Elisabeth De Schauwer: Why We Do What We (Think We) Do: Creating a Campus Coalition From the Perspective of Disability Studies in Education – Nirmala Erevelles: Madness and (Higher Education) Administration: Ethical Implications of Pedagogy Using Disability Studies Scholarship – Julie Allan: Critiquing Policy: Limitations and Possibilities – Missy Morton: Using Disability Studies in Education to Recognize, Resist, and Reshape Policy and Practices in Aotearoa New Zealand – Kathleen Collins: A Disability Studies in Education Analysis of Corporate-Based Educational Reform: Lessons From New Orleans – Jan W. Valle/Chris Hale/David J. Connor: All That Jazz: Using Disability Studies in Education to (Re)Envision the Applied Field of (Special) Education.

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