Inclusion in Urban Educational Environments

Denise E. Armstrong|Brenda J. McMahon
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9781593114930
15 April 2006
£45.00
Hardback
9781593114947
15 April 2006
£80.00
eBook (PDF)
9781607527206
15 April 2006
£45.00
eBook (ePub)
9781918115987
15 April 2006
£45.00

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  • Description
  • Contents

This book is motivated by our experiences in working with students and their families in urban communities. We are particularly concerned about the urgent imperative to address the endemic educational and societal challenges that pervade the lives of urban students, particularly those who live in poverty, are of minority and immigrant backgrounds, and are otherwise marginalized within the current educational discourses and practices. In spite of the fact that over the last 3 decades policy makers, educators and communities across the globe have called for in depth structural changes, this is rarely evidenced in the discourses, practices, and structures within academic and practitioner spheres. This reluctance, despite articulations to the contrary, can be directly linked to normative theoretical and practical perspectives that are defined by assumptions that constrain urban students within restrictive boundaries. These narrow outsider worldviews based on notions of what ought to be, combined with ignorance of the realties of students’ lives focus on deviance and deficits. They blind prospective change agents to the strengths and richness that students bring, and they delimit the transformative potential of social justice praxis within urban environments. The resulting discourse, in the form of deficit beliefs, thoughts, actions, and dialogues shapes urban research, theory, and practice. We contend that in order to counteract the debilitating impacts of these harmful constructions of urban and social justice, it is important to clarify this terminology.

Acknowledgments.

  • Introduction.
  • Part I. Intersecting Exclusions Within School Culture.
  • Chapter 1. Exclusion in Urban Schools and Communities; Jim Ryan.
  • Chapter 2. Understanding School Culture: In/Exclusion Within Yearbook Discourses; Rene Antrop-Gonzalez, Debra Freedman, Jennifer L. Snow-Gerono, Anne L. Slonake, Pey-Chewn Duo, and Hsiu-Ping Huang.
  • Part II. Socioeconomic Status and Ability.
  • Chapter 3. Reflecting on Mary H. Wright Elementary: Ideologies of High Expectations in a Re-Segregated School; Susan L. Schramm-Pate, Rhonda B. Jeffries, and Leigh Kale D'Amico.
  • Chapter 4. Seeing the Glass as Half Full: Meeting the Needs of Underprivileged Students Through School-Community Partnerships; Catherine Hands.
  • Chapter 5. Flipping the Special Education Coin: The Heads and Tails of Administering Schools for Students with Different Needs; Lindy Zaretsky.
  • Part III. Gender and Sexual Identity.
  • Chapter 6. Gender: A H.O.T. (Higher Order Thinking) Link in Educating Urban Students; Amy Barnhill.
  • Chapter 7. LGBTQ Students in Urban Schools: Sexuality, Gender, and School Identities; Dominique Johnson.
  • Chapter 8. My Favorite Martian: The Cry for Visibility of Sexual Minorities in Urban Schools; Kevin Alderson.
  • Chapter 9. Urban Girls Empowering Themselves Through Education: The Issue of Voice; Gunilla Holm and Bill Cobern.
  • Part IV. Race and Ethnicity.
  • Chapter 10. Black Boys Through the School-Prison Pipeline: When Racial Profiling and Zero Tolerance Collide; Patrick Solomon and Howard Palmer.
  • Chapter 11. White Fragility: I'm Leaving; Robin DiAngelo.
  • Chapter 12. Anne Frank Teaches Teachers About the Holocaust; Leslie Shore.
  • Chapter 13. Addressing Multicultural and Antiracist Theory and Practice With Canadian Teacher Activists; Darren Lund.
  • Part V. Toward Inclusion in Schools and Communities.
  • Chapter 14. Support That Matters: A Case Study in Raising the Achievement of Economically Vulnerable Youth; Norman Rowen and Kevin Gosine.
  • Chapter 15. Framing Equitable Praxis: Systematic Approaches to Building Socially Just and Inclusionary Educational Communities; Brenda J. McMahon and Denise E. Armstrong.
  • About the Authors.