[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index] 911 tragedy and inclusive education?
Here's a message I posted to students in two university classes related to inclusive education. Michael ____________________________ This has been a week of tragedy, for all humanity. For the first time, indiscriminate killing of typical people for political reasons has come to America, a situatin that most of the world has lived with for many years. Many of us have heard the name of bin Laden for the first time and gradually become aware of how little typical Americans know of our own country's activities in the middle east and elsewhere. How many knew that bin Laden was trained and supported by the CIA. And now we stand on the brink of a retaliatory war that some think has the potential for opening up World War 3. We are teachers. How do we deal with this situation as teachers. There's been much online dialogue in which I've been involved in the last week regarding that question. Here's a wonderful site with alternative views than we are seeing in mainstream media but with links to all sorts of media and information sources that may be useful in your own learning and that of your students: http://www.commondreams.org. We are already seeing hate attacks against Arabic and Muslim citizens of this country throughout the United States. I will shortly post here a message sent by a friend and colleague who asks all of us to join in helping to protect those people unjustly attacked. So what about the title of this message. What is the relationship between this tragedy and inclusive education? As we go through class, I'd encourage you to let your mind ponder that question. For starters, however, consider this line of thought. Our real problems in dealing in care and community with one another starts, it seems to many, with our inability to build communities, and the social institutions within them, that can allow, tolerate, and more -- actually celebrate real diversity, where people of difference of all sorts can be together, be who they are, yet value and appreciate one another. The second issue, it seems, is highly correlated with this -- that those who seek power and fiscal resources (at all levels in all countries) actually use these divisions among us to advance their own gain. You can see this in Hitler. Some say (both US and Afghani) that you can see this in bin Laden. However, you can also see this happening in our countries policy and military actions in the middle east and elsewhere throughout the world. What to do? Well, the actions to take are both big and small. However, a critical place to start is to take seriously the challenge to create places in our communities, and schools are one of the most important, where we show, in concrete form, that if people are different they don't have to leave and go somewhere else -- to their own country, to a separate class or school, to a separate part of town. That some schools are learning to include children of very different academic, social-emotional, and physical disabilities together, children from different levels of wealth, differing ethnicity, culture and language, gives us hope. The more schools we have like this the more that we help children learn, by living it, that we CAN all be together, in peace, each getting what we need, giving to others to help them. The paradigm of separation and segregation ultimately leads to a message of violence. My encouragement is that you grapple with this concept, trying to shift away from the ideology of segregation that pervades our society towards one of inclusive community. Look forward to the semester. Michael ___________________________ Michael Peterson Wayne State University Detroit, Michigan 48202 Whole Schooling Consortium http://www.coe.wayne.edu/CommunityBuilding/WSC.html
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