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History General

A Class by Themselves?

The Origins of Special Education in Toronto and Beyond

by (author) Jason Ellis

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Feb 2019
Category
General, General, History, History
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781442628717
    Publish Date
    Feb 2019
    List Price
    $40.95
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781442637115
    Publish Date
    Feb 2019
    List Price
    $82.00
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442624610
    Publish Date
    Mar 2019
    List Price
    $40.95

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Description

In A Class by Themselves?, Jason Ellis provides an erudite and balanced history of special needs education, an early twentieth century educational innovation that continues to polarize school communities across Canada, the United States, and beyond.

 

Ellis situates the evolution of this educational innovation in its proper historical context to explore the rise of intelligence testing, the decline of child labour and rise of vocational guidance, emerging trends in mental hygiene and child psychology, and the implementation of a new progressive curriculum. At the core of this study are the students. This book is the first to draw deeply on rich archival sources, including 1000 pupil records of young people with learning difficulties, who attended public schools between 1918 and 1945. Ellis uses these records to retell individual stories that illuminate how disability filtered down through the school system’s many nooks and crannies to mark disabled students as different from (and often inferior to) other school children. A Class by Themselves? sheds new light on these and other issues by bringing special education’s curious past to bear on its constantly contested present.

About the author

Jason Ellis is an assistant professor in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia.

Jason Ellis' profile page

Awards

  • Commended, Disability History Association 2020 Outstanding Book Award
  • Short-listed, 2021 Heritage Toronto Book Award

Editorial Reviews

"Ellis’s work is not only empirically solid but also original, creative, and synthetic. His prose style is clear, his analytic structure solid, and his conclusions safely controlled (when he speculates, he says so). All these qualities put A Class by Themselves? in, well, a class by itself."

em>The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth</em>

"A Class by Themselves tells a complicated story, but one that embraces the complexities and contradictions. Ellis is creative in including neighborhoods, teachers, students, and parents in a narrative that might easily have stayed at the levels of theory and policy. In the concluding chapter, Ellis points to the ways that this history set the stage for further developments and present-day concerns in education, connections that will already be apparent to many readers by the end of his book."

<em>H Net Reviews</em>