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Book chapter

Heterogeneity and school

The authors explore why teachers are totally unprepared to accept in the classroom the various versions of diversity: ethnic, social, cultural. They argue that this is largely due to the way they have been trained and are called upon to educate. In Greek education, the value of homogeneity and the silencing of difference are two fixed axes on which national identity is built. The pedagogical consequence of this perception is everyday teaching practices that exclude anything that does not resemble the ideal average student.

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References

Androussou A., Askouni N., (2004) Heterogeneity and school, in Keys and Objectives, YPEΠΘ/ Panep. Athens University.

Cultural, Pedagogies, School
action-research classroom difference ethnic identity homogeneity multiple affiliations otherness reflection silencing teachers teaching practices

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European Innovation Council and the Executive Agency (State Scholarship Foundation-IKY). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.