包括社区和家庭在内的土著特殊教育:《土著社区学校与家长合作:为残疾儿童提供服务》书评

Spirit D. Brooks
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全球范围内,土著社区面临着阻碍其在教育环境中取得成功的障碍。这些障碍包括贫穷、缺乏社会支持、受教育机会有限以及出现健康问题的高风险。有特殊需要的土著学生面临更大的挑战。土著社区的学校-家长合作:为残疾儿童提供服务提供了土著经验中残疾背景的全面概述。该研究全面考察了全球范围内土著社区的独特性、对残疾反应的心理模型、多学科团队与学校和家庭合作的好处、影响残疾儿童的土著父母与学校专业人员之间合作的因素,以及土著协调合作的核心价值。Manor-Binyamini讨论了她在以色列南部贝都因人中进行的试点研究,以说明特殊教育教师和人员如何让贝都因父母参与干预他们的孩子。Manor-Binyamini提倡的“知识在行动”模式,不是仅仅把文化敏感性作为指导力量,而是呼吁特殊教育工作者和专业人士成为家庭和学校之间的文化调解人。该模式有可能影响特殊教育工作者与全球和地方土著社区合作的方式,以改善有特殊需要的土著学生的健康和福祉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Including Community and Family in Indigenous Special Education: A Book Review of School –Parent Collaborations in Indigenous Communities: Providing Services for Children with Disabilities
Globally, Indigenous communities face roadblocks that hinder their success in educational settings. These roadblocks include poverty, lack of social supports, limited access to education, and a high risk for health problems. Indigenous students with special needs face even greater challenges.  School –Parent Collaborations in Indigenous Communities: Providing Services for Children with Disabilities provides a comprehensive overview of the context of disability within indigenous experience. The study comprehensively examines the uniqueness of indigenous communities on a global scale, psychological models of reactions to disability, the benefit of multidisciplinary teams in working with schools and families, factors affecting collaboration between indigenous parents of children with disabilities and school professionals, and core values of indigenously attuned collaboration. Manor-Binyamini discusses her pilot study conducted among the Bedouins of Southern Israel to illustrate the ways that special education teachers and personnel engage Bedouin parents in interventions for their children. Rather than focusing solely on cultural sensitivity as a guiding force, the model Manor-Binyamini advocates, “Knowledge in Action” calls for special educators and professionals to be cultural mediators between family and schools. The model has the potential to impact the ways in which special educators work with indigenous communities globally and locally to improve the health and well-being of indigenous students with special needs. 
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