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Articles

Legitimating school segregation. The special education profession and the discourse of learning disability in Germany

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Pages 449-462 | Received 19 Mar 2010, Accepted 01 Sep 2010, Published online: 13 May 2011
 

Abstract

School segregation continues to be understood as legitimate in Germany. To explain why, we chart the development of the learning disability discourse and the special education profession, providing insights into the ongoing expansion of segregated special schooling. The discourse analysis of articles published between 1908 and 2004 in the special education professional association journal, Zeitschrift für Heilpädagogik, uncovers the knowledge base of special education that led to the rise of its main category, ‘learning disability,’ and school type, the support school (then: Hilfsschule, now: Förderschule). Despite critical junctures over the twentieth century, special education’s dominant discourse and school structures exhibit remarkable continuity. We find professional authority with respect to ‘learning disability’ is a key factor in the persistence and continued growth of segregated special education. Scientific discourse continues to legitimate the classification of pupils as ‘learning disabled’ and their subsequent allocation to segregated schools.

Acknowledgements

We thank this journal’s referees and our colleagues at the WZB for their helpful comments on earlier versions of this article. We gratefully acknowledge the Volkswagen Foundation’s T.H. Marshall Fellowship Programme, which provided us with research stays at Goldsmiths and at the LSE, facilitating completion of the collaborative project reported here.

Notes

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