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“Without being able to read, what's literacy mean to them?”: Situated beliefs about literacy for students with significant disabilities

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Abstract Beliefs about students and pedagogical knowledge have been identified as key barriers to accessible general education content and contexts for students with significant disabilities. In this case study of… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Beliefs about students and pedagogical knowledge have been identified as key barriers to accessible general education content and contexts for students with significant disabilities. In this case study of a high school special education literacy class, I examine definitions of literacy, expectations about students, and self-efficacy in the process of teaching literacy to students with significant disabilities. Team members expressed disjointed understandings about the purpose of literacy, lacked pedagogical knowledge, and had poor self-efficacy. Beliefs about “high” and “low” students, defined by students' orality, affected team members’ perceptions about the feasibility and priority of literacy for various groups of students.

Keywords: without able; able read; students significant; significant disabilities; literacy; literacy students

Journal Title: Teaching and Teacher Education
Year Published: 2017

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