Ability Profiling and School Failure, Second Edition explores
the social and contextual forces that shape the appearance of
academic ability and disability and how these forces influence the
perception of academic underachievement of minority students. At
the book s core is the powerful case study of a competent fifth
grader named Jay, an African American boy growing up in a
predominantly white, rural community, who was excluded from
participating in science and literacy discourses within his
classroom community.
In this new edition, researcher and teacher-educator Kathleen
Collins situates the story of Jay s struggle to be seen as
competent within current scholarly conversations about the
contextualized nature of dis/ability. In particular, she connects
her work to recent research into the overrepresentation of minority
students in special education, exploring the roles of situated
literacies, classroom interactions, and social stereotypes in
determining how some students come to be identified as "disabled."
Ability Profiling and School Failure, Second Edition comprises a
thorough investigation into the socially constructed nature of
ability, identity, and achievement, illustrating the role of
educational and social exclusion in positioning students within
particular identities.
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