Volume 9, Number 1 (2014) Challenging the Deficit Model and the Pathologizing of Children: Envisioning Alternative Models
EDITOR’S PREVIEW AND GUIDE TO THIS ISSUE
IN ADDITION TO ARTICLES IN RESPONSE TO THE CONTROVERSY, WE HAVE TWO SPECIAL SECTIONS BELOW:
PREVIEW AND SUPPLEMENT TO SPECIAL SECTION 1
Theme: THE PROSPECT EXPERIENCE: A STRENGTH-BASED ALTERNATIVE AND ITS LEGACY
Two examples of the Prospect Descriptive Process: (from the Volume 5, Number 1 issue of the Journal of Educational Controversy)
- Universal Power to Create (A Slide Show), Susan Donnelly
- Children’s Imaginative Communities - Microcosms of Democracy, Susan Donnelly
Link to the Prospect Archive of Children’s Work housed at the University of Vermont, Center for Digital Initiatives
See additional articles below under Special Section 1: THEME: THE PROSPECT EXPERIENCE: A STRENGTH-BASED ALTERNATIVE AND ITS LEGACY
PREVIEW OF SPECIAL SECTION 2
THEME: UPCOMING FORUM, PREVIEW OF THE FORUM'S UPCOMING DISCUSSION
In addition to the article below, readers can now view a video of the forum on our Public Forums Link on the menu.
SUPPLEMENT TO THE FILM REVIEW BELOW:
TRAILER FOR FILM
Read Rachel Severson's review of Schools Out: Lessons from a Forest Kindergarten (Bullfrog Films) below in the Film Review section
School's Out: Lessons from a Forest Kindergarten (Trailer) from Lisa Molomot on Vimeo.
Shown with permission of Bullfrog Films.
Editorial
Challenging the Deficit Model and the Pathologizing of Children: Envisioning Alternative Models
Lorraine Kasprisin
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Articles in Response to Controversy
Surpassing Sisyphus: The Tenacious and Promising Struggle to Push and Support a Strengths-Based Ideology and Practice in Education
Sara Truebridge
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
How We Are Complicit: Challenging the School Discourse of Adolescent Reading
Andrea Davis
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Against Rubbish Collecting: Educators & Resistively Ambivalent Youth
Tracey Pyscher
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Breaking the Mold: Thinking Beyond Deficits
Elyse Hambacher and Winston C. Thompson
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Urban Teachers Engaging in Critical Talk: Navigating Deficit Discourse and Neoliberal Logics
Heidi Pitzer
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Bottom-Line Choices: Effects of Market Ideology in Florida’s Voluntary Preschool Policies
Angela C. Passero and Roderick J. Jones
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Precarity and Pedagogical Responsibility
Ann Chinnery
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Special Section 1
To Patricia F. Carini: A Dedication
Susan Donnelly
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Theme: THE PROSPECT EXPERIENCE: A STRENGTH-BASED ALTERNATIVE AND ITS LEGACY
Resisting the “Single Story”
Ellen Schwartz
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Theme: THE PROSPECT EXPERIENCE: A STRENGTH-BASED ALTERNATIVE AND ITS LEGACY
Special Section 2
“Everyone Should Feel so Connected and Safe”: Using Parent Action Teams to Reach all Families
John Korsmo, Miguel Camarena, Andrea Clancy, Ann Eco, Bill Nutting, Basilia Quiroz, Azucena Ramirez, Veronica Villa-Mondragon, Stacy Youngquist, and Anne Jones
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Theme: UPCOMING FORUM, PREVIEW OF THE FORUM'S UPCOMING DISCUSSION
Book Reviews
How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character by Paul Tough
Sarita Y. Shukla
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Resilience Begins With Beliefs: Building on Student Strengths for Success in School by Sara Truebridge
Rolla E. Lewis
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Reinventing Schools: It’s Time to Break the Mold by Charles Reigeluth and Jennifer Karnopp
Marilyn Chu
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
“Multiplication is for White People” Raising Expectations for Other People’s Children, by Lisa Delpit
Sue-Lin Toussaint
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
Film Review
School’s Out: Lessons from a Forest Kindergarten - directed by Lisa Molomot; produced by Rona Richter
Rachel Severson
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
About the Authors
About the Authors
Vol. 9, Iss. 1
CONTROVERSY ADDRESSED IN THIS ISSUE:
Martin Seligman, founder of the field of positive psychology, has said that, “Modern psychology has been co-opted by the disease model. We've become too preoccupied with repairing damage when our focus should be on building strength and resilience, especially in children.” Is this also true of modern education? Political and pedagogical responses, from the “War on Poverty” through “No Child Left Behind” to address the educational gaps in academic achievement of historically marginalized and neglected groups (the poor, minorities and children with disabilities), were often deeply rooted in a language of cultural deprivation and special needs. Has this deficit model begun to surreptitiously creep into our educational discourse for all children? Have we become too focused on needs and deficiencies and forgotten that children also have capacities and strengths? Does the current emphasis on accountability and standardized testing contribute to the pathologizing of children? We invite authors to respond critically to this argument, envision alternative models, examine historical causes and precedents, analyze political and social ramifications, and share real life stories on the influence these ways of thinking have on the classroom and on the learning as experienced by students.
UPCOMING FORUM
Building on the Strengths of Families and Communities
The 17th Annual Educational Law and Social Justice Forum
Western Washington University
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
See a preview of the Forum's upcoming discussion under Special Section
UPDATE: A video of the forum is now on our Public Forums link.