Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?

Here we study what co-teaching produces when general education teachers (PLC) and special education teachers (PES) in secondary schools teach students in ordinary class with specific educational needs. Is co-teaching in a heterogeneous secondary class likely to promote educational differentiation ?...

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Main Authors: Myriam Janin, Gilles Moreau, Marie Toullec-Théry
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée 2021-06-01
Series:Éducation et Socialisation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/edso/14674
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spelling doaj-47093317f54a4f28b9dbcb66277e188e2021-07-08T17:08:33ZfraPresses universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉducation et Socialisation2271-60922021-06-016010.4000/edso.14674Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?Myriam JaninGilles MoreauMarie Toullec-ThéryHere we study what co-teaching produces when general education teachers (PLC) and special education teachers (PES) in secondary schools teach students in ordinary class with specific educational needs. Is co-teaching in a heterogeneous secondary class likely to promote educational differentiation ? This article articulates two approaches, one quantitative, based on a survey of a cohort of general and special education co-teachers, the other qualitative, based on the didactic analysis of a co-teaching session conducted by a PLC and a PES. This double approach highlights that co-teaching alone does not guarantee educational differentiation because of the risk of an imbalanced distribution of responsibilities between the co-teachers. As such, educational differentiation is reduced to the presence of the special education teacher and their interactions with students with disabilities. Instead, balance can be achieved through mutual planning time of the teaching, where clues collected during the sessions and didactic issues are worked on jointly. In this way, students’ challenges may be anticipated ahead of time and, consequently, educational differentiation makes learning accessible to them.http://journals.openedition.org/edso/14674co-teachingeducational differentiationheterogeneityinteractionspecial needs.
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Myriam Janin
Gilles Moreau
Marie Toullec-Théry
spellingShingle Myriam Janin
Gilles Moreau
Marie Toullec-Théry
Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
Éducation et Socialisation
co-teaching
educational differentiation
heterogeneity
interaction
special needs.
author_facet Myriam Janin
Gilles Moreau
Marie Toullec-Théry
author_sort Myriam Janin
title Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
title_short Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
title_full Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
title_fullStr Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
title_full_unstemmed Le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
title_sort le coenseignement dans une classe hétérogène promeut-il une différenciation pédagogique ?
publisher Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Éducation et Socialisation
issn 2271-6092
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Here we study what co-teaching produces when general education teachers (PLC) and special education teachers (PES) in secondary schools teach students in ordinary class with specific educational needs. Is co-teaching in a heterogeneous secondary class likely to promote educational differentiation ? This article articulates two approaches, one quantitative, based on a survey of a cohort of general and special education co-teachers, the other qualitative, based on the didactic analysis of a co-teaching session conducted by a PLC and a PES. This double approach highlights that co-teaching alone does not guarantee educational differentiation because of the risk of an imbalanced distribution of responsibilities between the co-teachers. As such, educational differentiation is reduced to the presence of the special education teacher and their interactions with students with disabilities. Instead, balance can be achieved through mutual planning time of the teaching, where clues collected during the sessions and didactic issues are worked on jointly. In this way, students’ challenges may be anticipated ahead of time and, consequently, educational differentiation makes learning accessible to them.
topic co-teaching
educational differentiation
heterogeneity
interaction
special needs.
url http://journals.openedition.org/edso/14674
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