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Caribbean Discourse in Inclusive Education is an edited book series
that aims to give voice to Caribbean scholars, practitioners, and
other professionals working in diverse classrooms. The book series
is intended to provide an ongoing forum for Caribbean researchers,
practitioners, and academics, including those of the Diaspora, to
critically examine issues that influence the education of children
within inclusive settings. The book series is visionary, timely,
authoritative and presents pioneering work in the area of inclusive
education in the Caribbean, as part of the broader South?South
dialogue. It is essential reading for students in undergraduate and
postgraduate programmes, scholars, teachers, researchers and policy
makers at the regional and international level. The first book in
this series entitled Historical and Contemporary Issues will trace
the history and examine the Caribbean's trajectory towards the
development of inclusive education in the 21st Century. The main
premise of the book is that inclusion remains an ideologically
sound goal, which remains elusive in the Caribbean. It will also
provide a wider platform to discuss other factors that influence
the development of inclusive education such as school climate,
culture and ethos, LGBT issues, teacher training and professional
development, pedagogy, pupil perspective, curriculum, policy and
legislation.
Foregrounding the perspectives of students from Barbados and St.
Vincent, this book offers valuable insight into the implementation
and effectiveness of international policies designed to improve
educational inclusion in the Caribbean. Drawing on pupil
participatory research conducted with adolescents in disadvantaged
and high-achieving schools, the text reveals differences in how
international policies are reflected in schools, highlighting the
role of student and school leadership, community building in and
outside of schools, and transformative teacher pedagogy in
achieving educational equity. Situating pupil participation and
student consultation in its theoretical and policy context in the
Caribbean, the author examines the findings on educational
inclusion and their implications for policy development in order to
propose a new model to boost pupil consultation and increase
academic inclusion and engagement. Juxtaposing students' voices
from a variety of socioeconomic, cultural, disability, and ethnic
backgrounds, Caribbean Student Voices and Educational Inclusion is
a great companion reader for educators, policymakers, and
researchers undertaking work on inclusive education in developed
and developing nations.
Caribbean Discourse in Inclusive Education is an edited book series
that aims to give voice to Caribbean scholars, practitioners, and
other professionals working in diverse classrooms. The book series
is intended to provide an ongoing forum for Caribbean researchers,
practitioners, and academics, including those of the Diaspora, to
critically examine issues that influence the education of children
within inclusive settings. The book series is visionary, timely,
authoritative and presents pioneering work in the area of inclusive
education in the Caribbean, as part of the broader South?South
dialogue. It is essential reading for students in undergraduate and
postgraduate programmes, scholars, teachers, researchers and policy
makers at the regional and international level. The first book in
this series entitled Historical and Contemporary Issues will trace
the history and examine the Caribbean's trajectory towards the
development of inclusive education in the 21st Century. The main
premise of the book is that inclusion remains an ideologically
sound goal, which remains elusive in the Caribbean. It will also
provide a wider platform to discuss other factors that influence
the development of inclusive education such as school climate,
culture and ethos, LGBT issues, teacher training and professional
development, pedagogy, pupil perspective, curriculum, policy and
legislation.
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