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Research Article

Troubling “The Problem” of racial overrepresentation in special education: a commentary and call to rethink research

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Pages 567-582 | Received 30 Sep 2018, Accepted 10 Nov 2018, Published online: 10 Dec 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Despite decades of research, there has been limited reduction in the overrepresentation of students of colour in high incidence special education categories. This commentary article seeks to problematise the notion of overrepresentation as it is currently conceptualised in educational research, and serves as a call to rethink how, why, and for whom we do this research, contextualised within a history of both racism and ableism in the United States. First, we assert that the field of special education, as epistemologically configured, has framed the problem of overrepresentation in ways that it cannot resolve, leaving us to call for a much needed change in how we research this phenomenon. Second, we challenge some basic assumptions within existing research practices to date, countering them with alternative knowledge claims. Third, to engage with, and potentially reframe researchers’ understanding of overrepresentation, we pose a variety of questions to contemplate within the interconnected domains of research, theory, practice, and policy. Fourth, we list promising existing research practices around overrepresentation by scholars committed to exploring its complexities. Finally, we offer further suggestions for potential ways to address challenges by centring the framework for considering overrepresentation as primarily social, cultural, historical, and contextual, that would move beyond the limited and ineffective response of special education to date.

Acknowledgments

The authors are very grateful to Deborah Gallagher, Audrey Trainor, Aydin Bal, Fabienne Doucet, and Hui-Ling Malone for their suggestions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

This article is part of the following collections:
Educational Review Article of the Year Award: Winning Papers

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