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Articles

Making a difference in educational inequality: reflections from research and practice

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Pages 473-485 | Received 02 May 2022, Accepted 27 May 2022, Published online: 19 Jun 2022
 

ABSTRACT

This article is a reflective, research-informed, commentary on educational disadvantage from two lecturers in Education who have spent large proportions of their professional lives working in ‘DEIS’ school settings before transitioning into teacher education. This reflection intends to problematise the concept of educational disadvantage and will then proceed to explore, through literature and some empirical findings, possibilities for changing paradigms of policy and practice in marginalised school settings. Most research and writing on educational disadvantage in Ireland has focused upon policy, statistics, and the problems that accompany marginalisation. We intend to explore possibilities for change at the level of policy and practice, considering interventions in terms of curriculum, pedagogy and assessment; and how we can address inequalities in educational experiences. We will explore possibilities around key areas such as: disrupting ‘cultural deficit’ theories and fixed ideas of ability related to educational disadvantage; consider nuanced intersectional understandings of inequalities in education; framing ‘funds of knowledge’ perspectives in curriculum, pedagogy and assessment; and encouraging critical pedagogical approaches amongst teachers. We are hopeful that this article will support teachers in schools, researchers and policy makers as they endeavour to make a difference in their work with marginalised communities.

Disclosure statement

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

Notes

1 Delivering Equality of Opportunity in Schools (DEIS) is the Irish state intervention package for schools in designated disadvantaged areas. See DES (2017). Deis is an Irish language word that means opportunity, thus the acronym.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Kevin Cahill

Kevin Cahill is a faculty member in the School of Education, University College Cork. He teaches, writes and supervises research across the fields of inclusive education, sociology of education, teacher education and pedagogy. Prior to joining UCC, Kevin was a post-primary school teacher for 18 years.

Dan O'Sullivan

Dan O'Sullivan is a faculty member in the School of Education, University College Cork. His research interests intersect across inclusive education, teacher identity, teacher education and sociocultural understandings of identity and learning. Prior to joining UCC, Dan was a primary school teacher for many years.

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