Academic Ableism and Students with Intellectual/Development Disabilities:

IF 0.6 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Critical Education Pub Date : 2020-11-30 DOI:10.14288/CE.V11I17.186501
Sean Kamperman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Per laws such as the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, college students with intellectual/developmental disabilities (I/DD) in the United States are expected to be self-advocates and speak up for needed accommodations, regardless of diagnosis or condition. Students with I/DD in particular are frequently taught the dominant view of self-advocacy as a set of skills whereby they achieve self-determination. This view undersells the degree to which self-advocacy is a rhetorical enterprise, wherein students craft their speech to achieve immediate social purposes; and it elides the political history of self-advocacy in the U.S. and its ties to the adult self-advocacy movement. In light of these considerations, I seek to understand how ableism on college campuses gives shape to particular ideas about self-advocacy. Through five student interviews, I analyze how everyday talk about self-advocacy on a university campus is constructed through ableist discourses privileging mastery, concealment of bodily difference, and autonomy. Based on this analysis, I argue that it is necessary that educators reimagine self-advocacy as a collective responsibility engaging students, faculty, administrators, and staff in creating more accessible campus cultures, rather than as a hyper-individualized, self-directed pursuit of personal goals.
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学业障碍与智力/发展障碍学生:
根据《美国残疾人法案》和《家庭教育权利和隐私法案》等法律,在美国,有智力/发育障碍(I/DD)的大学生应该是自我倡导者,并为所需的住宿大声疾呼,而不管诊断或病情如何。特别是患有I/DD的学生,经常被教导自我宣传的主流观点,认为这是他们实现自我决定的一套技能。这种观点低估了自我宣传是一种修辞事业的程度,学生们精心设计自己的演讲,以达到直接的社会目的;它忽略了美国自我倡导的政治历史及其与成人自我倡导运动的联系。鉴于这些考虑,我试图理解大学校园里的残疾歧视是如何形成关于自我宣传的特定观点的。通过对五名学生的访谈,我分析了大学校园中关于自我倡导的日常讨论是如何通过强调掌握、隐藏身体差异和自主的健康主义话语来构建的。基于这一分析,我认为教育工作者有必要将自我倡导重新想象为一种集体责任,让学生、教师、管理人员和员工参与创造更容易接近的校园文化,而不是一种高度个性化、自我导向的个人目标追求。
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来源期刊
Critical Education
Critical Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
30.00%
发文量
0
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