Background/Context: In disability critical race theory (DisCrit) Classroom Ecology, Annamma and Morrison (2018a) offered invaluable direction for teachers by proposing constructs that address racism and ableism within the foundational components of the classroom—curriculum, pedagogy, resistance, and solidarity. These liberatory lenses offered a critical framework to conceptualize and achieve DisCrit-aligned teaching and learning. However, as of yet, critically conscious classroom teachers who seek to make DisCrit live in spaces that serve multiply-marginalized students have no map to operationalize theory into practice. To support the enactment of DisCrit Classroom Ecology, scholarship must authentically partner with classroom teachers who are working with and who have influence over the educational trajectories of multiply-marginalized students. Objective: This article builds on lived practice and imagines liberatory praxis through the use of counternarratives as a methodological process. Presented in the form of three composite stories—a method of Critical Race Theory—practitioner-scholars and teacher-activists explore the potential of DisCrit Classroom Ecology constructs within literacy spaces across grade levels. Rather than asking how DisCrit informs classroom practice, these collaboratively developed composite stories explore how the praxis of teachers aligned with DisCrit can illuminate, operationalize, and expand theory. Participants: The three composite stories were codeveloped by six authors: three white practitioner-scholars and three activist teachers of color. Collectively, the pairs identified master narratives experienced in the teacher-activists’ actual classrooms, which each serve multiply-marginalized students. Research Design: This article applies counternarratives as both research methodology and a professional learning tool. Specifically, the coauthors developed three composite stories, based on participants’ lived experiences and relevant theory, to operationalize the constructs of DisCrit Classroom Ecology and interrogate master narratives surfacing in their classrooms. The six coauthors used the collaborative generation of composite stories to explore counternarratives as a tool for critically conscious praxis. Conclusions and Policy Recommendations: DisCrit affirmed actions rooted in solidarity and resistance that the teacher-activists hadn’t yet named as such and empowered them to apply the lens to more aspects of their practice. Teacher education and professional learning should include exploration of DisCrit and encourage the operationalization of DisCrit Classroom Ecology. Additionally, schools must resist the narrowing of curriculum and pedagogical rigidity that undermine solidarity with students served and reproduces deficit-oriented master narratives. Finally, education scholars need to reposition their research to not just include, but also actively learn from teachers, especially teachers of color whose lived experiences more often mirror the lived experiences of students with multiply-marginalized identities.
Public education in the United States has consistently and persistently failed significant numbers of students of color with Individual Education Programs (IEPs) in terms of providing a quality education that leads to graduation. DisCrit theory provides a lens for understanding the impact of race and disability as intersectional, marginalized identities on student outcomes. We employed a grounded theory approach to explore how racist deficit perspectives and the ableist medical model of dis/ability simultaneously inform and limit what teachers imagine for their students and themselves. Key findings revealed teachers struggled to align their espoused values with their classroom experiences. Faced with challenges, teachers did not demonstrate intersectional thinking related to race and dis/ability, instead they snapped back to deficit perspectives, stretched into questioning, and rarely took action. To counter this, we identified entry points and generated recommendations to support teachers in building an intersectional approach to understanding multiply marginalized students.
This book review of Teaching When the World Is on Fire, a collection of essays edited by Lisa Delpit, discusses some of the strengths of the collection, highlights particularly useful chapters and reflects on ways the volume might have better achieved the explicit and implicit goals set forth by the editor.
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