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The “inclusion” of students with vision impairments: generational perspectives in Australia

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by Ben WhitburnBen Whitburn
In this paper I draw upon findings of a recent qualitative project conducted in Queensland, Australia in which all actors – the researcher and 5 participants aged 13-17 years — were linked together by our shared experiences of being students with impaired vision (VI) and who were educated in inclusive secondary schools in Australia during the last two decades. The narrative demonstrates the alienating legacy of two everyday routines of schooling, the placement and the daily commute. In the paper I show how referential knowledge acquisition of a trans-identity research alliance can reveal barriers to inclusion that might be ordinarily overlooked. Theoretically I map the research relationship formed between myself and participants using both Foucault’s analysis of how human beings are made subjects (1982) and Bourdieu’s understanding of reflexive interviewing in qualitative research (1998). The empirical contribution of this paper is to demonstrate how special education discourses render subjects more “special” than the sum of their actual impairments, and methodologically to highlight the role of qualitative inquiry in the field of inclusive schooling.

History

Journal

International Journal of Whole Schooling

Volume

10

Pagination

1-18

Location

United States

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1710-2146

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Whole Schooling Consortium

Issue

1

Publisher

Whole Schooling Consortium