Struggling for Inclusion

£40.00

Struggling for Inclusion

Educational Leadership in a Neoliberal World

Social research and statistics Educational administration and organization

Author: James Ryan

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Collection: Issues in the Research, Theory, Policy, and Practice of Urban Education

Language: English

Published by: Information Age Publishing

Published on: 24th January 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781806615506


Introduction

This book describes the struggles in which inclusive-minded administrators find themselves when they promote equity initiatives. Administrators routinely struggle when they attempt to include all members of their school communities - teachers, students, and parents - in the various aspects of schooling. Given the presence of a host of obstacles, setting right the injustices associated with racism, classism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, and other exclusive practices is not an easy thing to do.

Resistance from colleagues who fail to recognize exclusive practices when they see them, and from others who do recognize them but see no harm, too few resources, exclusive policies, personal uncertainties or insecurities, and conflicted priorities are just a few of the phenomena that get in the way of these efforts. This book explores these struggles. It looks at the contexts within which these encounters occur, the various challenges that inclusive-minded administrators encounter, and the strategies that they employ to meet these tests.

Purpose and Approach

Employing the results of original empirical studies, surveys of current research, recent theoretical literature and personal experiences, this book seeks to provide school leaders with a sense of what it is like to promote inclusion and equity in the contemporary neoliberal context. Among other things, it looks to provide educators with an understanding of the obstacles that stand in the way of inclusion, the nature of the struggles that await them, and ideas for what they might do.

Conclusions

Among other things, the book concludes that in relation to the pursuit of inclusion:

  • exclusion continues to be part of contemporary schools and communities;
  • struggles for inclusion transcend individual educators, students and parents;
  • administrators are sometimes part of the problem of exclusion;
  • administrators struggle with issues of difference;
  • administrators struggle with circumstances they inherit, people with whom they work, and with themselves;
  • administrators have resources to employ in their struggles for inclusion.

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