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Learning to Teach Inclusively: Student Teachers' Classroom Inquiries » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Learning to Teach Inclusively: Student Teachers' Classroom Inquiries by Celia Oyler

Authors: Celia Oyler
ISBN-13: 9780805854312, ISBN-10: 0805854312
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Date Published: September 2006
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Celia Oyler

Book Synopsis

This book—co-authored by a teacher educator, a diverse group of five pre-service student teachers, and their student teaching supervisor—takes a unique, illuminating look at the experience of student teaching from the perspective of student teachers. It is premised on learning to teach as an inquiry process enriched by collaborative conversations. Readers are invited into student teachers’ dilemmas and decisions as they negotiate between their public school placements and their university-based coursework. Throughout the year of student teaching, the authors document their discussions and reflections about teaching in inclusive classrooms that shed light on the complex process of learning to teach and also offer insights into issues of teaching for equity.

Each of the central chapters is written by an individual student teacher and tracks a specific question over the course of two semesters. Topics include:
*contrasting models of inclusion and teachers’ differing orientations toward issues of community, difference, and normalcy;
*how teachers foster peer relationships;
*classroom management and discipline;
*heterogeneous instruction; and
*school-wide culture and systems that promote or mitigate against inclusion.

A new perspective on what can be learned from student teaching is provided by the student teachers’ supervisor. In the concluding chapter, the teacher educators address the connections among the student teachers’ inquiries and offer an analysis from a disability studies/disability rights perspective on how inclusion fits into a social (rather than a medical) model of disability. All of the authors of this book seek to contribute to conversations that place advocacy, inquiry, contestation, and challenge at the center of the teacher’s role. This volume is their invitation to readers to join in a larger conversation about the challenges of, and necessity for, becoming inclusive teachers.

Learning to Teach Inclusively is intended for inservice and preservice courses in elementary education, inclusion, and teacher research, and for field experience seminars. It is also suitable for graduate courses in teacher research, supervision, and research in teacher education.

Table of Contents

1Learning to teach in heterogeneous elementary classrooms1
2Carine Allaf's inquiry : my search for the perfect classroom14
3Barbara Wang's inquiry : how teachers foster peer relationships32
4Scott Howard's inquiry : investigating the challenge of managing a classroom full of individuals52
5Leslie Gore's inquiry : designing accessible instruction70
6Jen Lee's inquiry : struggle and change in school communities92
7Scaffolding student teachers' inquiries : the vision in supervision115
8Being an inclusive teacher135

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