9780807767320-0807767328-Why Are So Many Students of Color in Special Education?: Understanding Race and Disability in Schools

Why Are So Many Students of Color in Special Education?: Understanding Race and Disability in Schools

ISBN-13: 9780807767320
ISBN-10: 0807767328
Edition: 3
Author: Beth Harry, Janette Klingner
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Format: Paperback 272 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780807767320
ISBN-10: 0807767328
Edition: 3
Author: Beth Harry, Janette Klingner
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Format: Paperback 272 pages

Summary

Why Are So Many Students of Color in Special Education?: Understanding Race and Disability in Schools (ISBN-13: 9780807767320 and ISBN-10: 0807767328), written by authors Beth Harry, Janette Klingner, was published by Teachers College Press in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other Race Relations (Special Education, Schools & Teaching, Sociology) books. You can easily purchase or rent Why Are So Many Students of Color in Special Education?: Understanding Race and Disability in Schools (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Race Relations books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $7.88.

Description

Bringing to life the voices of children, families, and school personnel, this bestseller describes in detail the school climates and social processes that place many children of color at risk of being assigned inappropriate disability labels. Now in its third edition, this powerful ethnographic study examines the placement of Black and Hispanic students in the subjectively determined, high-incidence disability categories of special education. The authors present compelling narratives representing the range of experiences faced by culturally and linguistically diverse students who fall under the liminal shadow of perceived disability. This edition updates the literature on disproportionality, highlighting the deeply embedded and systemic nature of this decades-old pattern in which reforms represent mere shifts across disability categories, while disproportionality remains. Applying lenses of cultural-historical and critical disability theories, this edition expands on the authors' previous theoretical insights with updated recommendations for improving educational practice, teacher training, and policy renewal.

Book Features:

  • A unique examination of the school-based contributors to disproportionality based on research conducted in a large, culturally diverse school district.
  • Holistic views of the referral and placement process detailing students' trajectories across 4 years from initial instruction to referral, evaluation, and placement in special education.
  • An update on the patterns and literature related to disproportionality.
  • Analysis of the cultural-historical nature of disproportionality and the socially constructed nature of the high-incidence disability categories.
  • Recommendations for changing the conceptualization of children's learning difficulties, moving away from the presumption of children's intrinsic deficits toward evaluations based on human variation.

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