Written by teachers and teacher educators, this book presents practice-focused ideas and provocative questions to help teachers plan for inclusive curriculum and assessment within key learning areas in school education.
Written by teachers and teacher educators, this book presents practice-focused ideas and provocative questions to help teachers plan for inclusive curriculum and assessment within key learning areas in school education.
Providing content on specific disciplines including geography, history, mathematics, science, English and the Arts, this book supports teachers with hands-on examples for creating inclusive assessment practices in schools. There are additional sections on interdisciplinary perspectives delivering practical strategies for assessing students who use English as an additional language, being inclusive in relation to gender and sexual diversity, using a variety of technologies to promote inclusivity and applying inclusive assessment in rural, regional and remote contexts. Each chapter is designed around problems encountered by teachers, practical responses and recommendations for practice. The authors address Australian Indigenous perspectives, gender and diversity, rural and remote school systems, and translanguaging for multicultural contexts.
Engaging and easy to read, this book is essential reading for pre- and in-service teachers seeking to make an impactful contribution to inclusive education in their classrooms.
Introduction
1. Inclusive assessment in action Part I Disciplinary
practices
2. Unlocking history for all: Achieving inclusivity in the history
classroom through Assessment for Learning (AfL)
3. Designing inclusive
Assessment for Learning in English Language Arts
4. Daily Discourse:
Empowering every student in mathematics through Assessment for Learning
5.
Supporting childrens spatial understanding through technology: The
importance of dialogical exchange analysed through inclusive research
6. A
place for all: Inclusive practices in Arts assessment
7. Learning and
assessment in school science: Assistive technologies for diverse learners
8.
Inclusive practice and geographical assessment: Practical tips to increase
task accessibility Part II Interdisciplinary practices
9. Indigenous
perspectives in assessment: Applying a place-based approach
10. Queer(y)ing
primary assessment: Bodies, genders, and sexuality diversity
11. Embracing
translanguaging in designing inclusive assessments with learners of English
as an additional language or dialect
12. Spotlighting rural and remote
inclusive assessment: Systemic perspectives from the field Part III Future
practice
13. Inclusive classroom assessment and social justice
James P. Davis is an Associate Professor in STEM and Entrepreneurial Education, Academic Lead Engagement (Research) in the School of Teacher Education and Leadership, as well as the Lead for the QUT STEM Education Research Group. James is also a former Program Leader for Engagement and Learning in the QUT Centre for Inclusive Education, and a current executive committee member of the Australian Teacher Education Association (ATEA).
Sarah Adams is a Lecturer in Geography Education, School of Teacher Education and Leadership, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
Catherine Challen is a Senior Lecturer in Maths Education, School of Teacher Education and Leadership, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
Theresa Bourke is a Professor and Head of School at the Queensland University of Technology, Australia. She is the current President of the Australian Teacher Education Association (ATEA).