Institutional Separation in Schools of Education: Understanding the Functions of Space in General and Special Education Teacher Preparation

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Feb. 10, 2011

This article was published in Teaching and Teacher Education, Vol 27 number 2,
Author(s): Kathryn S. Young, " Institutional Separation in Schools of Education: Understanding the Functions of Space in General and Special Education Teacher Preparation", Pages 483-493, Copyright Elsevier (February 2011).

This spatial study is aimed to understand the function space play in a combined credential program in the US in helping or hindering the program’s inclusive mission.
The study examines how physical and social manifestations of general and special education are (re)organized in the new program.

The data provides evidence for the pervasive separation between general and special education within the new program.
It was found that the lack of successful inclusive education in schools is related to the lack of well-aligned inclusive preparation in universities. Separate structures of special and general education at the federal and state level are evidenced in the School of Education.

Furthermore, physical and social spaces are active components of maintaining the educational status quo. Hence, separate spaces for general and special education maintain the sorting function related to student differences in schools.
This study emphasizes the importance of examining space in relation to teacher education reform as a way to highlight where policy, institutional, programmatic, physical, and pedagogic changes are needed to support inclusive teacher preparation.

Updated: Dec. 15, 2011
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