1st Edition

The Language of Inclusive Education Exploring speaking, listening, reading and writing

By Elizabeth Walton Copyright 2016
    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Language of Inclusive Education is an insightful text which considers the writing, speaking, reading and hearing of inclusive education. Based on the premise that humans use language to construct their worlds and their realities, this book is concerned with how language works to determine what we know and understand about issues related to in/exclusion in education. Using a variety of analytical tools, the author exposes language-at-work in academic and popular literature and in policy documents. Areas of focus include:

      • What inclusive education means and how it is defined
      • How metaphor works to position inclusive education
      • How textbooks construct inclusive education 
      • How we use language to build what we understand to be difference and disability, with particular reference to AD(H)D and Asperger’s Syndrome
      • Listening to children and young people as a means to promote inclusion in schools

    Woven through this volume is the argument for a more critical awareness of how we use language in the field that we call ‘inclusive education’. This book is a must-read for any individual studying, practicing or an interest in inclusion and  exploring the associations with language.

      1. Inclusive education as a discourse  2. Inclusive education as an ideology or field  3. The meaning of inclusive education  4. Metaphors that matter in inclusive education  5. Inclusive education on the (university) library shelf  6. Languaging ADHD  7. Reading and writing in/exclusion: The schadenfreude of Asperger’s Syndrome  8. Speaking and hearing in/exclusion

      Biography

      Elizabeth Walton is a Senior Lecturer in Inclusive Education at the School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.

      "Author Walton makes a good case for the need to include children with special needs in all aspects of education, and focuses on how the “language” of disability continues to be a major obstacle to the integration of all children into classrooms." - J. D. Neal,  Choice