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Articles

Beyond a seat at the table: imagining educational equity through critical inclusion

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 69-95 | Received 14 Feb 2022, Accepted 24 Jan 2023, Published online: 16 Feb 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Interlocking mechanisms of exclusion function as gatekeepers to high-quality learning in schools, which perpetuate oppressive conceptions of ability, learning, and intelligence. Across educational ecosystems, these intersecting forms of oppression—including but not limited to racism, ableism, and colonialism—are reified through exclusionary practices that hoard learning opportunities. In this paper, we contend that learning-access disparities are at the crux of educational inequalities, and that theoretical fragmentation across educational disciplines has limited our understanding of entrenched patterns of exclusion and potential solutions. This fragmentation has led to siloed equity conversations and solutions; therefore, we articulate a conceptual framework for inclusive education: Critical Inclusion (InCrit). In doing so, we first engage in a critical-historical review of educational inclusion, including how it has been theorised and operationalised in both research and praxis. We next describe the cross-pollination of the foundational theories on which the conceptual framework stands to emphasise intersectionality and emancipatory education in relation to the vast scholarship on critical inclusion. We then present the framework’s core components, which represent connectors between theory and practice, and illustrative examples. We conclude with a discussion of the cross-systems change required to make meaningful progress toward emancipatory education for all students and achieve critical inclusion in practice.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 We use “disability” when referring to a label applied to a student based on legal and/or school-based constructions of disability. Alternatively, we use the term “dis-ability” to indicate “a spectrum or multitude rather than the binary of dis/ability” (Greenstein, Citation2016, p. 14) when referring to an individual’s social identity as a dis-abled person.

2 We intentionally distinguish between placed in special education/labeled with special educational needs and students with a range of socially constructed dis-abilities, as these constructs represent different but overlapping definitions and treatments of student ability.

3 Though we foreground ableism and racism in this manuscript, we emphasize that many other markers of difference (e.g., language background, gender, sexual orientation) contribute to experiences of exclusion and inclusion in schools and that “this negotiation of multiple stigmatized identities adds complexity” (Annamma et al., Citation2013, p. 20) and warrants further research.

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