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Inclusion, Power, and Community:Teachers and Students Interpret the Language of Community in an Inclusion ClassroomUniversity at Buffalo, State University of New York
To illuminate the processes of creating learning communities, this study investigated the social context of an inclusion classroom by examining (a) how teachers established a community ethos, (b) how students responded with regard to the positioning of students with disabilities, and (c) how macro discourses possibly shaped interactional processes. Teachers used discourse and participation frameworks in whole-class lessons to encourage participation and collective responsibility for "helping." Nevertheless, the teachers inclusive language was manipulated to harass and exclude in small-group contexts. Benhabibs conceptions of "general" and "concrete" selves and Cornelius and Herrenkohls aspects of classroom powerassigning ownership, creating alliances, engaging in persuasionframe a discussion of contexts of inclusion and exclusion.
Key Words: discourse inclusion learning community participation social interaction
American Educational Research Journal, Vol. 43, No. 3,
489-529 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
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