Teachers Living with Contradictions: Social Representations of Inclusion, Exclusion and Stratification in Israeli Schools
Mots-clés :
social representations, inclusion, exclusion, stratification, ethnography researchRésumé
This paper describes part of an ethnographic research study that examined the Social Representations
of inclusion and stratification within Israeli elementary schools. These concepts derive from separate
theoretical sources. Inclusion is a central concept in educational thinking and research; stratification is
a frequently used term in sociology. Two other closely related concepts are exclusion, derived from
critical political research and teachers' differential behavior, an individual-centered concept derived
from psychological approaches. The use of Social Representations Theory (SRT) enabled us to
examine everyday life situations in schools through the prisms of sociological and psychological
approaches combining the collective and individual, and facilitate a new perspective. The findings
revealed a dichotomy in school life between inclusion and stratification. The declared school ideology
was that of inclusion and of objection to exclusion and to stratification, whereas the daily discourse and
the main school practice served the purpose of stratification. To cope with these incompatible
representations, the teachers developed different kinds of camouflage strategies expressed in their
school practice and daily discourse. Their strategies helped them deal with, solve or ignore the gap
between these two goals without seemingly choosing one goal over another.
In the discussion I argue that these strategies structure the teacher’s world in order to reduce
the discomfort arising from this incompatibility, to turn the unfamiliar to familiar and to create
camouflaged reality in which they can live.