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Examining Teachers’ Professional Development for Promoting Inclusive Education in Displacement

Kurawa, Gwadabe

Authors

Profile image of Gwadabe Kurawa

Gwadabe Kurawa G.W.Kurawa@hull.ac.uk
Head of MA Special Educational Needs, Disabilities and Inclusion Programme



Contributors

Bethany M. Rice
Editor

Abstract

Inclusive education, in most countries affected by an emergency or crisis, is focused on providing access to quality education for all children. Provision of quality education for all children, as discussed in much literature about education, is very much dependent on teacher quality. Improving and sustaining the quality of teaching is equally determined by the type of training and professional development offered to teachers. Teachers, however, in emergency contexts such as in the Northeast of Nigeria, may be recruited to improve student learning, having received little or no relevant training. Therefore, professional learning for teachers that is intended to offer them opportunities for immediate and sustained improvement in practice is, this chapter argues, needed in such emergency contexts. This chapter therefore analyses teacher professional development that can improve the standard of education for all children and then assesses the effect of this development in practice in the Northeast of Nigeria.

Citation

Kurawa, G. (2019). Examining Teachers’ Professional Development for Promoting Inclusive Education in Displacement. In B. M. Rice (Ed.), Global Perspectives on Inclusive Teacher Education (260-278). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7703-4.ch016

Online Publication Date Jan 1, 2019
Publication Date Jan 1, 2019
Deposit Date Jan 8, 2025
Publisher IGI Global
Pages 260-278
Book Title Global Perspectives on Inclusive Teacher Education
Chapter Number 16
ISBN 9781522577034 ; 9781522592150
DOI https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7703-4.ch016
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4920576