1. What does it take to embrace? Part 1 – Being apart; 2. The embrace of certainty; 3. Where uncertainty leads? 4. Participating with inequality; 5. Seeking fairer participation; 6. Building exculsionary communities; 7. Including ourselves; 8. What does it take to embrace?; Part 2 – Being a-part
Jonathan Rix is a professor of Participation & Learning Support at The Open University and Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, having taught for many years in schools and other community settings. His award-winning research has included groundbreaking participatory projects involving disabled people, multi-national studies of special education, explorations of effective pedagogy in mainstream schools and parental experiences of services. Among his numerous publications is Must Inclusion Be Special?, also published by Routledge.
'I have found the book that I wish I had written. Written to be
read, considered and reread, In Search of Education, Participation
and Inclusion: Embrace the Uncertain is the most refreshing and
thought-full text in our field that I have read for some time. At
the outset it is a thoroughly engaging, provocative and scholarly
work that presses the reader to account for their own educational
thinking and practices. Rix offers absorbing narratives to lead us
into very accessible explanations of the assumptions we hold that
direct our thinking about and practices in education. Using the
metaphor of “embrace” we are invited to explore and analyse our own
beliefs and sets of relationships, conceptual and practical, with
education and schooling. Drawing on Dewey, amongst many others (I
did say this is a meticulously scholarly book), we are presented
with education as a means for applying certitude in an increasingly
uncertain world. Jonathan Rix lithely exposes obviously ridiculous
foundations of the way we have gone about the business of educating
and schooling while reassuring the reader that we can, by
“embracing the uncertain” do it another way. In doing so, we will
untether ourselves from the misadventure of schooling in its
present form and create opportunities for children and young people
free from the very thin identities we have bestowed upon them that
hinder learning. Those around me will certainly be urged to procure
and read this thought-changing book.' Roger Slee, PhD, Professor in
Disability and Inclusion, University of Leeds, Founder and
Editor-in-Chief, International Journal of Inclusive Education'At a
time when educational outcomes are the tail wagging the dog, when
research gurus promote off-the-shelf solutions and top-down
approaches to solve educational inequities, when curriculum means
follow a textbook, and when research fetishize certainty through
experimental designs and big data analysis, Jonathan Rix challenges
the reader to do the opposite: Embrace uncertainty. In Search of
Education, Participation and Inclusion offers a fresh look at
educational exclusion and its possible solutions. This book, filled
with intimate stories and thoughtful reflections, argues that
uncertainty led us to an unimagined path that can be more expansive
and inclusive than those we imagine in the first place. Those
looking for easy (certain) solutions to complex educational
exclusions search elsewhere; those who have the courage to embrace
the uncertain and serpentine path towards a more just and inclusive
education, look no further.'Federico R. Waitoller, PhD, Associate
Professor, Department of Special Education at The University of
Illinois at Chicago, Associate Editor, Review of Educational
Research 'In Search of Education, Participation and Inclusion
provides the reader with an excellent critical overview of current
theories and practices concerning inclusive education. It looks at
this relevant subject from multiple perspectives. It navigates the
complex and often conflictual debate about inclusive education by
developing an exciting dialogue with other disciplines that helps
review and expand our frame of reference regarding this topic. In
addition, it goes straight to the point in addressing some of the
most pressing questions that researchers and practitioners usually
struggle with when they aim to secure all children more equal and
fair opportunities for education. Finally, the author effectively
supports reflection on educational research and practices with
powerful examples taken from his wide professional and personal
experience. Accordingly, while the book helps the reader achieve a
thorough understanding of the complex problems inclusive education
faces today, it also provides an authoritative guide to those
working in this crucial field.'Fabio Dovigo, PhD, Professor,
Educational Psychology Department, Danish School of Education,
Aarhus University, Founding Editor, European Journal of Inclusive
Education'I found this book absorbing, funny, moving and thought
provoking. As educationalists, the book challenges us to stop
wanting, needing, planning for and expecting certainty, and it
calls on us to resist fixedness in our pursuit of a “better” way. I
have learned to question my own dependence on certainty because as
Jonathan Rix explains so eloquently, we can keep education open to
possibilities if we go where uncertainty leads us. In this book we
also learn that uncertainty (rather than certainty) is the
substrate for developing more inclusive and participative ways of
being through education. The author employs anecdote, theory,
philosophy, drawings, diagrams, models and polemic to support and
entertain us in our journey toward relinquishing certainty in
favour of more fluid ways of being. Most of all, the book reminds
us that singular, monolithic, authoritarian and fixed positions on
what education is and how it should unfold, are useless. Please
read the book. It will inspire you!'Deborah Robinson, EdD (SFHEA),
Professor of Special Educational Needs and Inclusion, Institute of
Education, University of Derby'Rix does a great job of making the
book about and for everyone, while never making invisible people
who are disabled and marginalised.'
Reviewed by Melanie Nind for the British Journal of Learning
Disabilities.'A deeply moving, personal and highly scholarly
account.'
Reviewed in the European Journal of Special Needs Education.
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