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Teachers' understanding(s) of educational inclusion and exclusion: a discursive analysis of limits and possibilities

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 11:48 authored by Kellie Morrison, James Ladwig
This paper draws on interviews with teachers that were conducted as part of the EGSIE-Australia project which sought to empirically investigate the relationships bewteen education governance and social inclusion and exclusion. The teacher sample was a national group of principals, head teachers, and teachers, who were identified by their ongoing commitment to, and practical work with, educational disadvantage and social inclusion and exclusion in schools and the wider community. The paper explores how these teachers made sense of categories such a 'marginalisation' and 'disadvantage', seeking to highlight the implications for practice for the ways in which teachers use such categories to understand the limits (and possibilities) of their own practice within current contexts and shifts in educational governance. It also reports on changes in the ways in which educational governance has impacted at the level of practice, as reported by these educational practitioners and demonstrates the frontiers of our discursive understandings of social inclusion and exclusion.

History

Source title

Proceedings of the AARE 2000 Conference

Name of conference

AARE 2000 Conference

Location

Sydney

Start date

2000-12-04

End date

2000-12-07

Editors

Jeffery, P. L.

Publisher

Australian Association for Research in Education (AARE)

Place published

Coldstream, Vic.

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Education

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