4.2 Article

Leading Inclusive Schools: Principal Perceptions, Practices, and Challenges to Meaningful Change

Journal

EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION QUARTERLY
Volume 57, Issue 1, Pages 3-48

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0013161X20913897

Keywords

school leadership; inclusion; social justice; special education; racism; disability

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This study explores how elementary school principals perceived students with disabilities in a low-income Mexican American immigrant community, emphasizing the important role principals play in creating inclusive schools. The findings suggest that principals must consider various factors and draw upon a range of practices to promote meaningful change in the face of resistance and challenges.
Background: For over 50 years, special education has been used as a tool to maintain racial segregation, particularly in schools located in low-income communities of color. This study utilized tenets found in disability critical race theory (DisCrit) and inclusive school leadership literature to examine the perceptions, practices, and challenges associated with meaningful change in inclusive schools. Purpose: The purpose of this article was to understand how six elementary school principals, identified as effective inclusive leaders, perceived students with disabilities within a low-income Mexican American immigrant community along the U.S.-Mexico border. Findings: Our study highlights the important role principals play in creating inclusive schools and the ways in which race, disability, family background, language, and immigration status effect principals in their efforts to promote inclusion. While each principal recognized the noted factors above and confronted a multitude of challenges, they differed in their beliefs and approaches to creating inclusive schools. Some leadership practices were aligned to research focused on effective school leadership while others more closely resembled social justice leadership practices. Conclusion: Findings suggest that principals must take into consideration a variety of factors to create inclusive schools and must draw upon a broad range of practices amid resistance and challenges to meaningful change.

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