This article examines teacher professional learning about pedagogy for teachers of students with severe intellectual disabilities within broader teacher education and pedagogical frameworks for this group of learners. The article presents and discusses findings from a USA-England research project, involving classroom observations and interviews with nine teachers of students with severe intellectual disabilities from four specialist public school settings, intended to explore teachers' pedagogical decision-making and learning. The theoretical lens of situated learning and the conceptual lens of evidence-based practice are used to contextualise and examine the teachers' views about the what, how and when they learn about pedagogical approaches and strategies. Teachers emphasised the situated and interactional nature of their learning, particularly highlighting the personal responses of students and their relationship with these students. They use this knowledge and understanding to adapt evidence-based strategies and programmes and inform their pedagogical decisions. This affords the concepts of 'situated generalization' and 'practice based evidence' an influential role in how teachers engage in the process of pedagogical decision-making. An implication for teacher educators is the need to support teachers in making connections of new pedagogical understandings and skills with the individual learning profiles and responses of their students with severe intellectual disabilities.
IntroductionThis article focuses upon teacher learning in relation to the pedagogical decisionmaking of a group of teachers of students with severe intellectual disabilities in the south-west of Florida and the south-west of England. Whilst the international research project reported here is set in the USA and England, in their similarities and differences, these contexts are similar to many in the wider developed world. Considerations around pedagogies employed by teachers for students with special educational needs (SEN) are apparent in European literature (Meijer, Soriano, and Watkins 2003) and this article contributes to these discussions. We present, analyse and discuss the findings from the project which focused on teachers' views about the what, how and when they learn about the approaches and strategies that inform