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Mitigating Learner Disadvantages in Teaching and Learning

Shalin Hai-Jew (Sedgwick County, USA)
Indexed In: SCOPUS
Release Date: March, 2025 | Copyright: © 2025 | Pages: 536
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Publication Status: E-Book and Print Version Available for Purchase
ISBN13: 9798369386231
ISBN13 Softcover: 9798369386248
EISBN13: 9798369386255
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-8623-1

Description:

Education serves as a powerful tool for advancing individuals and society, but learners enter formal education with vastly different opportunities, backgrounds, and challenges. Addressing these disparities requires a commitment to equitable access, personalized support, and inclusive learning environments that recognize diverse needs. By fostering a growth mindset and providing the right incentives, education can empower all learners to reach their full potential without reinforcing systemic inequities. Achieving social justice in education means creating pathways for every student to succeed, regardless of their starting point, through policies and practices that acknowledge and address these differences. A holistic approach to education ensures that the needs of the whole learner are met, making learning more meaningful, accessible, and transformative for all.

Mitigating Learner Disadvantages in Teaching and Learning explores how to ensure that all learners have full access to learning and to the potential of their best selves. Furthermore, it discusses how social justice in education can be achieved. Covering topics such as incarcerated students, mentorship programs, and first-generation learners, this book is an excellent resource for teachers, school administrators, policymakers, social justice advocates, professionals, researchers, scholars, academicians, and more.

Coverage:

The many academic areas covered in this publication include, but are not limited to:

  • Employability Competences
  • First-Generation Learners
  • Higher Education
  • Incarcerated Students
  • Institutional Security
  • Internationally Trained Professionals
  • Learner Disadvantages
  • Learning Methods
  • Mentorship Programs
  • Non-Traditional Learners
  • Personalized Learning
  • Student Engagement
  • Teaching Methods
  • Technology Programs
  • Traditional Learners

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Dr. Shalin Hai-Jew works as a case manager for Sedgwick County. Prior, she has worked for many years in higher education, as a grant writer, instructional designer, instructor, and other roles. She has B.A.s in English and psychology from the University of Washington (Seattle), a master's in English (UW), and an Ed.D. in Educational Leadership from Seattle University, where she was a Morford Scholar. She tested into the University of Washington at age 14. She has lived and worked abroad for four years. She has edited several dozen nonfiction texts around the topics of education and technologies, among others. She has researched and written a dozen edited texts. She was born in Huntsville, Alabama, in the U.S.

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