Abstract

ABSTRACT Implementing inclusive education requires on-going commitment to teachers’ professional learning. One way of implementing professional learning is to develop learning communities based on Lave and Wenger’s ideas of situated learning and learning as social practice. Learning communities, drawing on models of Professional Learning Communities and communities of practice, were designed to build capacity for inclusive teaching in two rural schools in Australia and a peri-urban school in South Africa. This paper reports on a multi-case study that involves a cross-case analysis of these three learning communities. We demonstrate that across the three cases, responsiveness to contextual exigencies matters, expertise matters and supportive networks matter. These findings are further illuminated by complexity theory which draws attention to learning communities operating at the confluence of a number of interacting systems, as well as the possibility of change where teacher learning occurs through the recontextualisation of knowledge and learning across boundaries. Our findings support situated learning that values collaboration to develop social and inclusive cultures and practice in schools. The findings also have the potential to inform planning for professional learning for inclusive education.

Highlights

  • Inclusive education is a global agenda designed to address exclusion from and within education systems

  • The cross-case analysis resulted in three themes reporting on the quintain of teacher learning in learning communities

  • In City Primary (South Africa), teachers are recorded as coming to the Professional Learning Communities (PLCs) meetings at the end of the day being ‘so tired’ and being anxious to leave as soon as possible to return to their classrooms because they ‘have a lot of work in class’

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Summary

Introduction

Inclusive education is a global agenda designed to address exclusion from and within education systems. It is underpinned by human rights, equity and social justice and is often, though not exclusively, concerned with the educational inclusion of people with disabilities. Countries have implemented various professional development activities designed to enhance teachers’ capacity for inclusive teaching, which we take to mean pedagogical responsiveness to the needs of diverse learners. We suggest that learning communities connect teachers, build on expertise available in the school community and build a common language of practice. This paper focuses on learning communities designed to build capacity for inclusive teaching in two rural schools in Australia and a peri-urban school in South Africa.

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