The need for teachers who have both the knowledge and the skills to teach students in special education, especially students who are emergent bilinguals, is more critical today than ever before. Assumptions about the assurances outlined in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) have led to practices that have limited the scope of opportunities for culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) students with disabilities. This book examines the intent of special education policy, challenges existing systems, and explores the promise of using biography-driven instruction to transform students’ learning and enhance their personal growth and community life. With a focus on inclusive practices for working with CLD students with disabilities and their families, the book examines decision-making processes for placement, access, instruction, assessment, and evaluation. The authors show how inclusionary practices create contexts and conditions for teachers to foster their students’ academic abilities through authentic cariño and an ecology of care.
Book Features:
- Elucidates the challenges faced by educators and support personnel as they navigate and prioritize the needs of CLD students with disabilities in inclusive classrooms.
- Discloses the outdated, politically driven, inequitable, and inconsequential educational opportunities often afforded to CLD students receiving special services.
- Provides a framework for creating learning opportunities grounded in the six principles of IDEA and the personal and academic biography of learners and their families.
- Supports teachers and other staff to maximize four interrelated facets of the CLD student biography: sociocultural, linguistic, cognitive, and academic.
- Explores the multiple meanings of inclusion and academic engagement at the intersection of IDEA and biography-driven instruction.
Table of Contents:
ContentsForeword ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
Part I. Historically Centering the Student Through IDEA
1. Searching for Coal in a Gold Mine: Overlooking the Multifaceted Assets of the Learner 7
In Search of Answers 7Beyond a Deficit Perspective: Exploring Gaps in Systems 9The Foundation of an Asset-Driven Agenda 10Conclusion 122. Setting the Stage for Cognitive and Socioemotional Resilience: Reflecting on the Intersection of Policy and Systems 14
IDEA: With the Best of Intentions . . . Have We Arrived? 14Response to Intervention: Moving Beyond Reductionistic Exercises 19Biography: Noticing and Documenting Learner Potential 22Conclusion 23Part II. Applying Biography-Driven Practices in Inclusive Classrooms
3. A Biography-Driven Individualized Educational Plan 27
Moving Beyond Good Intentions Toward Documentable Impact 28Redefining Possibilities Through Equitable Instructional Delivery 33Creating Conditions and Situations for CLD Learners to Thrive 34"My Teacher Made Me Smart" 40Teachers Who See, Teachers Who Know: Observation, Facilitation, and Affirmation 41Building Blocks: Equity and Authentic Cariño 42Conclusion 434. Enriching Opportunities to Learn Through Collaborative Interaction 44
From "Me" to "We": Community Processes and Shared Products 45Maximizing Joint Productive Activity to Respond to the Whole Child 46Fostering Joint Productive Activity Through i+TpsI 52Using BDI Strategies to Guide Interactional Processes 53Conclusion 575. Creating Contexts and Conditions for an Inclusive Community Through Classroom Talk 58
Catalyzing Learning Through Community: Caring and Learning in Action 59Beginning With Biographies: Equity Begins With "i" 60Situationally Speaking: The Ebb and Flow of Reciprocal Talk 63Collaboration: Affirmation as Equity 66Agency "I": Context, Conditions, and Situations 67Conclusion 68Part III. Reimagining Equity for All Learners
6. Real-Life Language Development: A Bridge for Inclusive Classrooms 71
BDI as Treatment Context 72Conclusion 837. The Power of BDI for Students With Low-Incidence Disabilities 85
What's in the Label: Categorizing the Contradictions 85Social Model of Disability, UDL, and BDI 89Conclusion 908. Reframing Our Thoughts and Actions Through an Exceptional BDI Foundation: A Call to Action 93
With Dr. Natasha Reyes and Dr. Leonard Steen Exploring Perspectives of Referring Teachers 95Examining Practices and Perspectives of Child Study Teams 96The Elephant in the Process 98Conclusion 105Glossary 109
Appendix A: Overview of Select BDI Strategies 114
Appendix B: Template for Biography-Driven Goal Development Tool 116
References 117
Index 124
About the Authors 129
About the Author :
Socorro G. Herrera is a professor of curriculum and instruction and executive director of the Center for Intercultural and Multilingual Advocacy (CIMA) at Kansas State University.
Diane Rodriguez is a professor and associate dean in the Graduate School of Education at Fordham University.
Robin M. Cabral is an educational consultant with a background in district-level administration, bilingual speech language pathology, special education, literacy, assessment, and intervention development.
Melissa A. Holmes is associate director of CIMA.