超时:(重新)工作的残疾毕业生的就业能力

Shona Edwards, Alexandra Sudlow-Haylett
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在2019冠状病毒病大流行之后,世界各地对残疾人就业的兴趣日益浓厚,了解残疾毕业生的就业能力对政府、大学和雇主来说都是势在必行的。这篇文章通过残疾毕业生的生活经历来调查就业能力,并以一位作者(亚历山德拉)为案例研究。亚历山德拉的高等教育经历被定义为生活在瘸腿时间,一种独特的非线性时间残疾体验。亚历山德拉的故事描述了在一个对时间的规范理解是线性的、按时间顺序的、与生产力密不可分的机构中生存是如何对残疾学生造成伤害的。残疾学生被灌输“落后于时间”、“浪费时间”和“失去时间”的感觉,导致他们努力“赶上时间”,这影响了他们的健康、自信和自我意识。这种挣扎不利于残疾学生在整个学位期间花时间培养他们的“就业技能”。当残疾学生完成学业并寻求毕业后的工作时,他们会进一步接触到行业,这些行业通过就业经历和毕业生招聘过程,由于不适应残疾时间,进一步加剧了伤害。这个案例研究将传统的辅导项目作为一个网站,在这个网站上,像Alexandra这样的残疾学生面临着参与的障碍。我们主张共同设计一种可访问的、非分层的同伴指导模式,在这种模式下,crip时间被容纳和支持。这种无障碍的指导可以作为一种有效的干预,并为残疾学生提供发展基本就业技能的机会。
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Out of time: (Re)working disabled graduate employability
As interest in disability employment increases across the world following the COVID-19 pandemic, understanding the employability of disabled graduates becomes an imperative for governments, universities and employers alike. This article investigates employability through the lens of the lived experience of disabled graduates, with one author (Alexandra) serving as a case study. Alexandra’s experience in higher education has been defined by living in crip time, a unique disabled experience of time as non-linear. Alexandra’s story describes how surviving within institutions which operate on normative understandings of time as linear, chronological, and inextricably tied to productivity has caused harm to disabled students. Disabled students are made to feel as though they are ‘falling behind time,’ ‘wasting time,’ and ‘losing time,’ resulting in a struggle to ‘catch up time,’ which impacts upon their wellbeing, confidence, and their sense of self. This struggle disadvantages disabled students from spending time building their ‘employability skills’ throughout their degree. As disabled students complete their studies and seek graduate employment, they come into further contact with industry who further compound harm through placement experiences and the graduate hiring process by not accommodating for crip time. This case study poses conventional mentoring programmes as a site in which disabled students such as Alexandra face barriers to engagement. We argue for a co-designed model of accessible, non-hierarchical peer mentoring, where crip time is accommodated and supported. Such accessible mentoring may serve as an effective intervention and an opportunity for disabled students to develop essential employability skills.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
审稿时长
8 weeks
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