{"title":"拆解超级作弊教授:神学教育与教师可及性","authors":"Natalie Wigg-Stevenson","doi":"10.1080/23312521.2023.2270975","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractMost research around neurodiversity in higher education focuses on students, with little attention paid to faculty. This essay deploys autoethnographic narratives to (a) ground anti-ableist pedagogy in decolonizing pedagogy; (b) argue that cognitive- and neuro-diversity among faculty should be valued similarly to—and in intersection with—other forms of diversity, (c) explore barriers to disclosure among disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty, and (d) call for a structural approach to anti-ableism in theological education that not only accommodates disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty needs, but also scales up those accommodations to create a workplace environment in which all faculty can flourish.Keywords: Accessibilitydecolonialdecolonizingdisabilitydiversityfacultyneurodivergenceneurodiversitytheological education Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Autoethnographers use their personal experiences to bring wider cultural practices into view in ways that critique those practices and seek to transform them. While often dismissed as solipsistic, autoethnography has the potential to illuminate the affective, experiential dynamics of cultural practices. Its goal is less to convince the reader to think differently using an argument, and more to compel the reader to act differently using a story. Autoethnography therefore disrupts and re-configures dominant academic epistemologies; hence its inclusion in my scholarly toolkit. For more on autoethnography see: Adams et al., Citation2022; Ellis & Bochner, Citation2006; Holman Jones et al., Citation2013; Walford, Citation2021; Wigg-Stevenson, Citation2017).2 UDL stands for “Universal Design for Learning,” an approach that provides learners with multiple means of engagement, representation, action and expression in the learning process so that they access, build, and internalize their learning in ways that activate their affective, recognition and strategic networks. Its goal is to make learning accessible for all learners. Where learning is not accessible, learners require learning accommodations to have equitable access to their learning.3 I should admit that I didn’t know what UDL was when I received these comments. As I scoured articles about these techniques on the internet, I came across multiple graphics that summarize UDL’s core principles. These graphics made me physically nauseous because the amount of information they conveyed overwhelmed me. Put differently, my students’ frustrations didn’t just start my journey to learn about neurodiversity: their frustrations began my journey to learning I was neurodivergent!4 The most common version of this that I have experienced is when a student who has ADHD is given an extra week to finish their assignment. But when that student’s particular executive function struggle is around starting their assignment, the extra week actually makes things worse for them. For me to be able to support them in ways that actually improves their learning access and, even, potentially equips them with the skills required to manage their own learning processes better, would require they disclose their condition to me—which is precisely what Accessibility Services protects them from having to do. This isn’t Accessibility Services’ fault. They are also overworked, understaffed, underfunded and often doing the best they can in a wider university context that is oriented more towards legal compliance when it comes to disability than actual student care.5 Throughout this essay, I use a blend of person-first language, identity-first language, language related to the medical model for disability and even the pathologizing paradigm, as well as language related to the social disability model to refer to myself. I have made each choice in context to convey something particular about my experience. When speaking in general, though, and despite the more common use of person-first language in disability theology, I will use identity-first language like enabled and disabled, neurotypical and neurodivergent people, following Nick Walker’s critique (see https://neuroqueer.com/person-first-language-is-the-language-of-autistiphobic-bigots/).6 Brown and Leigh link academics’ tendency to minimize/avoid using their vacation time and/or sick leave with how values of research, teaching and good institutional citizenship get deployed to normalize overwork. Research shows that while “academics with disabilities or illnesses work hard to hold onto their academic work and identity whilst compromising other aspects of their life…non-academic individuals with similar health challenges reported that work was the first thing they dropped to maintain their personal lives and relationships.” (Brown & Leigh, Citation2018: 986–987). Further, while we don’t yet have hard data on academic versus non-academic rates of divorce, the significant anecdotal evidence has led to more people calling for research into the relationship between academic workloads, gender and marital dissolution (Boufis, Citation1999).7 The term, ‘supercrip’ was coined by disability advocate and writer, Eli Clare, to demonstrate two forms of ableism: one everyday and one exceptional. For the everyday version, wider society interprets disability as a challenge to overcome, and thus interprets people with disabilities as superheroes—simply for living their lives. At the same time, wider society might only value people with disabilities when they’re able to demonstrate the exceptional as a source of inspiration for nondisabled people (e.g., climbing Everest, world leader in theoretical physics, running across Canada with one leg while dying of cancer). See Eli Clare, “The Mountain,” in (Clare, Citation2015).8 As my psychiatrist was writing my accessibility support letter, she had me practice the phrases: “I want to succeed at/be excellent at my job,” and “My psychiatrist says these are the accommodations I need to meet all the expectations of and/or excel in the workplace.” She warned me not [to] link the accommodations in any way to my own survival or wellness. “And definitely don’t mention your kids,” she added.I use these phrases in every accommodations-related meeting I have. They are the best advice I have to offer to other scholars seeking to secure their own accommodations. Frame every request with the way it helps you serve the institution. And practice your framing before any meeting. Because it’s going to feel awful to prioritize the institution over your own wellness as you try to secure your own survival.My other advice is not to underplay your needs—which my psychiatrist noted I was doing. I insisted that I wasn’t, but realize now that I was lying to her and to myself. I was afraid to ask for “too much.” Disabled, neurodivergent, and chronically ill people are always afraid of asking for or being “too much.” We have to stop that.9 It’s worth noting here, that my personal ‘accommodations’ are actually just a formal re-statement of the provincial labor laws where I live. Indeed, it was difficult to explain to my psychiatrist and human resources representative why my only chance of having a forty hour work week, daily thirty minute lunch breaks plus two other fifteen-minute breaks, and personal time to attend medical appointments (I didn’t even bother trying to ask for formal sick days) would be to request it via the Accessible Canada Act (ACA, Canada’s equivalent to the ADA), rather than via the provincial labour laws that already guaranteed it.10 A pre-pandemic, non-scientific study of Canadian professors found that we work an average of 48 hours per week (Brownell, Citation2018), a number that increased by at least 10 hours per week during the pandemic (Austin-Smith, Citation2020). Attending to the US (where the faculty workload situation is more bleak than in already-bleak Canada), a survey conducted by MIT in 2001 compared university faculty and CEOs regarding workload questions. 78% of faculty reported that “no matter how hard they work, they can’t get everything done” whereas on 48% of CEOs said the same. Furthermore, 62% of faculty reported “feeling physically or emotionally drained at the end of the day” compared to 55% of CEOs ((Berg & Seeber, Citation2016: pg. 16).11 I recognize that the terminology “crazy” can be ableist. It can also be reclaimed as empowering, which some of us in the “mad” community are doing. I use it here to self-describe because it’s one of the ways I identify. I would not, however, use it to describe anyone who hasn’t intentionally claimed it for themselves.12 I wasn’t diagnosed with ADHD until halfway through the term when I taught this course, at which point I shared about that in ad hoc ways as well whenever it felt relevant to our shared teaching and learning.13 The process of writing this article helped me figure out how to articulate and transfer these decolonizing, crip approaches into my redesign of the MDiv Integrative Seminar I am teaching this semester. They are even more interwoven into the structural pedagogical design of the course now, which has led me to move them from the syllabus’ ‘accessibility’ portion into the course and assignment descriptions—syllabus sections that the students and I have begun to refer to as “Natalie’s pedagogical manifesto” for shorthand.14 I wish I had good news or even just advice for specifically junior scholars here trying to navigate these same systems. I’ve only been tenured for about five years, but the precarity my generation faced seems like the golden years now compared to what post-pandemic junior scholars in theological education are dealing with. Particularly concerning is that by the point of tenure in an academic career, we’ve so internalized the propensity to overwork that it’s difficult to recognize our role in reproducing overwork’s normalization for each other and for the next generation. This is why it’s so important for those of us who do have institutional security not only to try to change these oppressive systems, but also to find ways to provide safe cover for junior colleagues navigating them as they’re currently rigged.15 Whereas a medical model for understanding disability sees a bodily impairment as a problem to be solved, a social model for understanding disability interprets the social conditions that make it impossible for people with impairments to flourish as the problem. So, whatever made my colleagues laugh are the same social conditions that make our shared flourishing impossible. And it’s those social conditions that need to change.16 A number that will surely increase thanks to the growing phenomena of Long-COVID and Post-Covid conditions.17 I should note that after sharing the draft of this article with our leadership, conversations in my context seem to be opening up. I’m hopeful!18 One of the peer reviewers for this article rightly pointed out that it ends on the desire for flourishing without theologizing what flourishing is. I agree with the reviewer that the article would be strengthened if I did that theological work. Instead of strengthening the article, though, I’m going to leave it just a little bit weak: not out of performative solidarity, but out of genuine need.I could just ignore the reviewer’s excellent suggestion. No one would have known. But I do have just enough energy to write this footnote.Yesterday I discerned that some institutionally marginalized students required ‘above and beyond’ care. Offering that care took an emotional and physical toll on me that I’m paying for today—the day I set aside to deal with the ‘flourishing edits’. I’m also close to my accommodated 40 hours for this week, this article is due, and I don’t want to make more work for this journal issue’s editors by missing the deadline.Knowing about my brain injury (which makes dealing with words difficult), Erin Rafferty, one of those editors, extended the generous offer to help me get it across the finish line. She has a lot on her plate too, though, so I wanted to find a way not to take her up on it. So, here I must extend gratitude to my writing group (Colleen Shantz, Michael O’Conner and Reid Locklin, especially Reid) who gave me emotional and intellectual support, as well as specific line edit feedback on this article’s penultimate draft, and to my research assistant Mike MacKenzie who proofread it for me. Their support let me finish up without Erin’s help. It takes a (neurodiverse) village!I don’t intend this footnote to set a precedent for authors just to articulate why they didn’t get everything done or just to shove what they didn’t get to into a note at the end of an article. But, I would direct the reader to the Canadian Journal of Theology, Mental Health, and Disability, where their experimentation with neuro-affirming forms of academic publishing has led them to include questions for readers to ponder at the end of their articles.And then, I would remind the reader that this paper already contains multiple stories that illustrate the “relational accountability” required for “meaningful access” playing about across the power differentials of a teacher and students who got to feel that not yet future hope before we thought it. It would also explain that the purpose of autoethnography isn’t to construct an argument that convinces the reader of a new idea but, rather, its purpose is to tell stories that compel the reader towards a new action. And I would ask you: what might the already not yet version of flourishing look like for you?","PeriodicalId":38120,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Disability and Religion","volume":"15 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Dismantling the Supercrip Prof: Theological Education and Faculty Accessibility\",\"authors\":\"Natalie Wigg-Stevenson\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/23312521.2023.2270975\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractMost research around neurodiversity in higher education focuses on students, with little attention paid to faculty. This essay deploys autoethnographic narratives to (a) ground anti-ableist pedagogy in decolonizing pedagogy; (b) argue that cognitive- and neuro-diversity among faculty should be valued similarly to—and in intersection with—other forms of diversity, (c) explore barriers to disclosure among disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty, and (d) call for a structural approach to anti-ableism in theological education that not only accommodates disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty needs, but also scales up those accommodations to create a workplace environment in which all faculty can flourish.Keywords: Accessibilitydecolonialdecolonizingdisabilitydiversityfacultyneurodivergenceneurodiversitytheological education Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Autoethnographers use their personal experiences to bring wider cultural practices into view in ways that critique those practices and seek to transform them. While often dismissed as solipsistic, autoethnography has the potential to illuminate the affective, experiential dynamics of cultural practices. Its goal is less to convince the reader to think differently using an argument, and more to compel the reader to act differently using a story. Autoethnography therefore disrupts and re-configures dominant academic epistemologies; hence its inclusion in my scholarly toolkit. For more on autoethnography see: Adams et al., Citation2022; Ellis & Bochner, Citation2006; Holman Jones et al., Citation2013; Walford, Citation2021; Wigg-Stevenson, Citation2017).2 UDL stands for “Universal Design for Learning,” an approach that provides learners with multiple means of engagement, representation, action and expression in the learning process so that they access, build, and internalize their learning in ways that activate their affective, recognition and strategic networks. Its goal is to make learning accessible for all learners. Where learning is not accessible, learners require learning accommodations to have equitable access to their learning.3 I should admit that I didn’t know what UDL was when I received these comments. As I scoured articles about these techniques on the internet, I came across multiple graphics that summarize UDL’s core principles. These graphics made me physically nauseous because the amount of information they conveyed overwhelmed me. Put differently, my students’ frustrations didn’t just start my journey to learn about neurodiversity: their frustrations began my journey to learning I was neurodivergent!4 The most common version of this that I have experienced is when a student who has ADHD is given an extra week to finish their assignment. But when that student’s particular executive function struggle is around starting their assignment, the extra week actually makes things worse for them. For me to be able to support them in ways that actually improves their learning access and, even, potentially equips them with the skills required to manage their own learning processes better, would require they disclose their condition to me—which is precisely what Accessibility Services protects them from having to do. This isn’t Accessibility Services’ fault. They are also overworked, understaffed, underfunded and often doing the best they can in a wider university context that is oriented more towards legal compliance when it comes to disability than actual student care.5 Throughout this essay, I use a blend of person-first language, identity-first language, language related to the medical model for disability and even the pathologizing paradigm, as well as language related to the social disability model to refer to myself. I have made each choice in context to convey something particular about my experience. When speaking in general, though, and despite the more common use of person-first language in disability theology, I will use identity-first language like enabled and disabled, neurotypical and neurodivergent people, following Nick Walker’s critique (see https://neuroqueer.com/person-first-language-is-the-language-of-autistiphobic-bigots/).6 Brown and Leigh link academics’ tendency to minimize/avoid using their vacation time and/or sick leave with how values of research, teaching and good institutional citizenship get deployed to normalize overwork. Research shows that while “academics with disabilities or illnesses work hard to hold onto their academic work and identity whilst compromising other aspects of their life…non-academic individuals with similar health challenges reported that work was the first thing they dropped to maintain their personal lives and relationships.” (Brown & Leigh, Citation2018: 986–987). Further, while we don’t yet have hard data on academic versus non-academic rates of divorce, the significant anecdotal evidence has led to more people calling for research into the relationship between academic workloads, gender and marital dissolution (Boufis, Citation1999).7 The term, ‘supercrip’ was coined by disability advocate and writer, Eli Clare, to demonstrate two forms of ableism: one everyday and one exceptional. For the everyday version, wider society interprets disability as a challenge to overcome, and thus interprets people with disabilities as superheroes—simply for living their lives. At the same time, wider society might only value people with disabilities when they’re able to demonstrate the exceptional as a source of inspiration for nondisabled people (e.g., climbing Everest, world leader in theoretical physics, running across Canada with one leg while dying of cancer). See Eli Clare, “The Mountain,” in (Clare, Citation2015).8 As my psychiatrist was writing my accessibility support letter, she had me practice the phrases: “I want to succeed at/be excellent at my job,” and “My psychiatrist says these are the accommodations I need to meet all the expectations of and/or excel in the workplace.” She warned me not [to] link the accommodations in any way to my own survival or wellness. “And definitely don’t mention your kids,” she added.I use these phrases in every accommodations-related meeting I have. They are the best advice I have to offer to other scholars seeking to secure their own accommodations. Frame every request with the way it helps you serve the institution. And practice your framing before any meeting. Because it’s going to feel awful to prioritize the institution over your own wellness as you try to secure your own survival.My other advice is not to underplay your needs—which my psychiatrist noted I was doing. I insisted that I wasn’t, but realize now that I was lying to her and to myself. I was afraid to ask for “too much.” Disabled, neurodivergent, and chronically ill people are always afraid of asking for or being “too much.” We have to stop that.9 It’s worth noting here, that my personal ‘accommodations’ are actually just a formal re-statement of the provincial labor laws where I live. Indeed, it was difficult to explain to my psychiatrist and human resources representative why my only chance of having a forty hour work week, daily thirty minute lunch breaks plus two other fifteen-minute breaks, and personal time to attend medical appointments (I didn’t even bother trying to ask for formal sick days) would be to request it via the Accessible Canada Act (ACA, Canada’s equivalent to the ADA), rather than via the provincial labour laws that already guaranteed it.10 A pre-pandemic, non-scientific study of Canadian professors found that we work an average of 48 hours per week (Brownell, Citation2018), a number that increased by at least 10 hours per week during the pandemic (Austin-Smith, Citation2020). Attending to the US (where the faculty workload situation is more bleak than in already-bleak Canada), a survey conducted by MIT in 2001 compared university faculty and CEOs regarding workload questions. 78% of faculty reported that “no matter how hard they work, they can’t get everything done” whereas on 48% of CEOs said the same. Furthermore, 62% of faculty reported “feeling physically or emotionally drained at the end of the day” compared to 55% of CEOs ((Berg & Seeber, Citation2016: pg. 16).11 I recognize that the terminology “crazy” can be ableist. It can also be reclaimed as empowering, which some of us in the “mad” community are doing. I use it here to self-describe because it’s one of the ways I identify. I would not, however, use it to describe anyone who hasn’t intentionally claimed it for themselves.12 I wasn’t diagnosed with ADHD until halfway through the term when I taught this course, at which point I shared about that in ad hoc ways as well whenever it felt relevant to our shared teaching and learning.13 The process of writing this article helped me figure out how to articulate and transfer these decolonizing, crip approaches into my redesign of the MDiv Integrative Seminar I am teaching this semester. They are even more interwoven into the structural pedagogical design of the course now, which has led me to move them from the syllabus’ ‘accessibility’ portion into the course and assignment descriptions—syllabus sections that the students and I have begun to refer to as “Natalie’s pedagogical manifesto” for shorthand.14 I wish I had good news or even just advice for specifically junior scholars here trying to navigate these same systems. I’ve only been tenured for about five years, but the precarity my generation faced seems like the golden years now compared to what post-pandemic junior scholars in theological education are dealing with. Particularly concerning is that by the point of tenure in an academic career, we’ve so internalized the propensity to overwork that it’s difficult to recognize our role in reproducing overwork’s normalization for each other and for the next generation. This is why it’s so important for those of us who do have institutional security not only to try to change these oppressive systems, but also to find ways to provide safe cover for junior colleagues navigating them as they’re currently rigged.15 Whereas a medical model for understanding disability sees a bodily impairment as a problem to be solved, a social model for understanding disability interprets the social conditions that make it impossible for people with impairments to flourish as the problem. So, whatever made my colleagues laugh are the same social conditions that make our shared flourishing impossible. And it’s those social conditions that need to change.16 A number that will surely increase thanks to the growing phenomena of Long-COVID and Post-Covid conditions.17 I should note that after sharing the draft of this article with our leadership, conversations in my context seem to be opening up. I’m hopeful!18 One of the peer reviewers for this article rightly pointed out that it ends on the desire for flourishing without theologizing what flourishing is. I agree with the reviewer that the article would be strengthened if I did that theological work. Instead of strengthening the article, though, I’m going to leave it just a little bit weak: not out of performative solidarity, but out of genuine need.I could just ignore the reviewer’s excellent suggestion. No one would have known. But I do have just enough energy to write this footnote.Yesterday I discerned that some institutionally marginalized students required ‘above and beyond’ care. Offering that care took an emotional and physical toll on me that I’m paying for today—the day I set aside to deal with the ‘flourishing edits’. I’m also close to my accommodated 40 hours for this week, this article is due, and I don’t want to make more work for this journal issue’s editors by missing the deadline.Knowing about my brain injury (which makes dealing with words difficult), Erin Rafferty, one of those editors, extended the generous offer to help me get it across the finish line. She has a lot on her plate too, though, so I wanted to find a way not to take her up on it. So, here I must extend gratitude to my writing group (Colleen Shantz, Michael O’Conner and Reid Locklin, especially Reid) who gave me emotional and intellectual support, as well as specific line edit feedback on this article’s penultimate draft, and to my research assistant Mike MacKenzie who proofread it for me. Their support let me finish up without Erin’s help. It takes a (neurodiverse) village!I don’t intend this footnote to set a precedent for authors just to articulate why they didn’t get everything done or just to shove what they didn’t get to into a note at the end of an article. But, I would direct the reader to the Canadian Journal of Theology, Mental Health, and Disability, where their experimentation with neuro-affirming forms of academic publishing has led them to include questions for readers to ponder at the end of their articles.And then, I would remind the reader that this paper already contains multiple stories that illustrate the “relational accountability” required for “meaningful access” playing about across the power differentials of a teacher and students who got to feel that not yet future hope before we thought it. It would also explain that the purpose of autoethnography isn’t to construct an argument that convinces the reader of a new idea but, rather, its purpose is to tell stories that compel the reader towards a new action. And I would ask you: what might the already not yet version of flourishing look like for you?\",\"PeriodicalId\":38120,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Disability and Religion\",\"volume\":\"15 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-02\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Disability and Religion\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/23312521.2023.2270975\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"Arts and Humanities\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Disability and Religion","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/23312521.2023.2270975","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要关于高等教育中神经多样性的研究大多集中在学生身上,很少关注教师。本文运用自我民族志叙事(a)在非殖民化教育学中奠定反白人主义教育学的基础;(b)认为教师之间的认知和神经多样性应该与其他形式的多样性一样被重视,并与之交叉;(c)探索残疾、慢性病和神经发散性教师之间的信息披露障碍;(d)呼吁在神学教育中采取一种结构性的方法来反对残疾主义,不仅要满足残疾、慢性病和神经发散性教师的需求;但也要扩大这些住宿条件,创造一个所有教师都能蓬勃发展的工作环境。关键词:无障碍,非殖民化,残疾,多样性,教师,神经分化,神经多样性,神学教育披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1:自己的民族志学者利用他们的个人经历,以批评这些习俗并寻求改变它们的方式,将更广泛的文化习俗带入人们的视野。虽然经常被视为唯我论,但自我民族志有可能阐明文化实践的情感和经验动态。它的目的不是用一个论点说服读者以不同的方式思考,而是用一个故事迫使读者以不同的方式行动。因此,自我民族志破坏并重新配置占主导地位的学术认识论;因此,它被纳入我的学术工具包。有关自我民族志的更多信息,请参见:Adams et al., Citation2022;Ellis & Bochner, Citation2006;Holman Jones等人,Citation2013;Walford Citation2021;Wigg-Stevenson Citation2017)。2UDL代表“学习通用设计”(Universal Design for Learning),是一种为学习者在学习过程中提供多种参与、表达、行动和表达方式的方法,使他们能够以激活他们的情感、认知和战略网络的方式访问、构建和内化他们的学习。它的目标是使所有学习者都能学习。在无法获得学习的地方,学习者需要学习便利设施,以便公平地获得学习机会我应该承认,当我收到这些评论时,我并不知道UDL是什么。当我在互联网上搜索有关这些技术的文章时,我发现了多个总结UDL核心原则的图形。这些图像让我感到恶心,因为它们所传达的信息量让我不堪重负。换句话说,我的学生们的挫折不仅开启了我学习神经多样性的旅程:他们的挫折也开启了我了解自己是神经分化者的旅程!我所经历过的最常见的情况是,给一个患有多动症的学生额外一周的时间来完成他们的作业。但是,当学生的执行功能在开始作业时出现问题时,额外的一周实际上会让事情变得更糟。对我来说,为了能够以实际改善他们学习机会的方式支持他们,甚至潜在地为他们提供更好地管理自己学习过程所需的技能,他们需要向我透露自己的情况——这正是无障碍服务保护他们不必做的事情。这不是无障碍服务的错。他们也超负荷工作、人手不足、资金不足,而且往往在更广泛的大学环境中尽最大努力,当涉及到残疾时,他们更倾向于遵守法律,而不是实际照顾学生在这篇文章中,我使用了一种混合的个人第一语言,身份第一语言,与残疾医学模型甚至病理范式相关的语言,以及与社会残疾模型相关的语言来指代我自己。我所做的每一个选择都是为了传达我的经历中的一些特殊的东西。一般来说,尽管在残疾神学中更常见地使用以人为本的语言,但我将使用身份优先的语言,如有能力的和残疾的,神经典型的和神经发散的人,遵循尼克·沃克的批评(见https://neuroqueer.com/person-first-language-is-the-language-of-autistiphobic-bigots/).6)布朗和利将学者倾向于尽量减少/避免使用他们的假期和/或病假与研究的价值联系起来。教学和良好的制度公民被用来规范过度工作。研究表明,虽然“有残疾或疾病的学者努力保持他们的学术工作和身份,同时牺牲他们生活的其他方面……但有类似健康问题的非学术人士报告说,为了维持个人生活和人际关系,他们首先放弃了工作。”(Brown & Leigh, Citation2018: 986-987)。 尤其令人担忧的是,在学术生涯的终身职位上,我们已经将过度工作的倾向内化,以至于很难认识到我们在为彼此和下一代再现过度工作正常化方面所扮演的角色。这就是为什么对于我们这些拥有制度安全的人来说,不仅要试图改变这些压迫性的制度,而且要想办法为那些目前被操纵的年轻同事提供安全的掩护理解残疾的医学模型将身体缺陷视为一个需要解决的问题,而理解残疾的社会模型则将导致残疾人无法茁壮成长的社会条件视为问题。所以,无论是什么让我的同事们发笑,都是同样的社会条件,使我们不可能共同繁荣。正是这些社会条件需要改变由于covid - 19期间和covid - 19后的情况越来越多,这一数字肯定会增加我应该指出的是,在与我们的领导层分享了这篇文章的草稿之后,在我的背景下的对话似乎开始了。我希望!18这篇文章的一位同行审稿人正确地指出,它结束于对繁荣的渴望,而没有神学化繁荣是什么。我同意审稿人的观点,如果我做了神学方面的工作,文章会更有说服力。不过,我不打算加强这篇文章,而是打算让它稍微弱一点:不是出于表现上的团结,而是出于真正的需要。我可以忽略评论者的好建议。没人会知道的。但是我有足够的精力来写这个脚注。昨天,我发现一些被学校边缘化的学生需要“超越”的照顾。提供这种照顾对我的情感和身体都造成了伤害,我今天为此付出了代价——我留出了一天来处理“蓬勃发展的编辑”。我这周也快到预定的40个小时了,这篇文章要到期了,我不想因为错过最后期限而给这期杂志的编辑带来更多的工作。了解到我的脑损伤(这让我很难处理文字),其中一位编辑艾琳·拉弗蒂(Erin Rafferty)慷慨地帮助我把它带过了终点线。不过她也有很多事要忙,所以我想找个办法不让她插手。因此,在这里我必须感谢我的写作团队(Colleen Shantz, Michael O ' connor和Reid Locklin,尤其是Reid),他们给了我情感和智力上的支持,以及对本文倒数第二稿的具体编辑反馈,还有我的研究助理Mike MacKenzie,他为我校对了这篇文章。他们的支持让我在没有艾琳帮助的情况下完成了任务。这需要一个(神经多样化的)村庄!我不打算用这个脚注为作者树立一个先例,只是为了阐明为什么他们没有完成所有的事情,或者只是把他们没有完成的事情塞进文章末尾的注释中。但是,我会建议读者去看《加拿大神学、心理健康和残疾杂志》,他们在学术出版中对神经肯定形式的实验,导致他们在文章的末尾包含了读者思考的问题。然后,我想提醒读者,这篇文章已经包含了多个故事,这些故事说明了“有意义的访问”所需的“关系问责制”,在教师和学生的权力差异中发挥作用,他们在我们想到它之前就感受到了未来的希望。这也可以解释,自我民族志的目的不是构建一个论据,说服读者接受一个新的想法,而是讲述故事,迫使读者采取新的行动。我会问你:对你来说,尚未实现的繁荣会是什么样子?
Dismantling the Supercrip Prof: Theological Education and Faculty Accessibility
AbstractMost research around neurodiversity in higher education focuses on students, with little attention paid to faculty. This essay deploys autoethnographic narratives to (a) ground anti-ableist pedagogy in decolonizing pedagogy; (b) argue that cognitive- and neuro-diversity among faculty should be valued similarly to—and in intersection with—other forms of diversity, (c) explore barriers to disclosure among disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty, and (d) call for a structural approach to anti-ableism in theological education that not only accommodates disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent faculty needs, but also scales up those accommodations to create a workplace environment in which all faculty can flourish.Keywords: Accessibilitydecolonialdecolonizingdisabilitydiversityfacultyneurodivergenceneurodiversitytheological education Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Autoethnographers use their personal experiences to bring wider cultural practices into view in ways that critique those practices and seek to transform them. While often dismissed as solipsistic, autoethnography has the potential to illuminate the affective, experiential dynamics of cultural practices. Its goal is less to convince the reader to think differently using an argument, and more to compel the reader to act differently using a story. Autoethnography therefore disrupts and re-configures dominant academic epistemologies; hence its inclusion in my scholarly toolkit. For more on autoethnography see: Adams et al., Citation2022; Ellis & Bochner, Citation2006; Holman Jones et al., Citation2013; Walford, Citation2021; Wigg-Stevenson, Citation2017).2 UDL stands for “Universal Design for Learning,” an approach that provides learners with multiple means of engagement, representation, action and expression in the learning process so that they access, build, and internalize their learning in ways that activate their affective, recognition and strategic networks. Its goal is to make learning accessible for all learners. Where learning is not accessible, learners require learning accommodations to have equitable access to their learning.3 I should admit that I didn’t know what UDL was when I received these comments. As I scoured articles about these techniques on the internet, I came across multiple graphics that summarize UDL’s core principles. These graphics made me physically nauseous because the amount of information they conveyed overwhelmed me. Put differently, my students’ frustrations didn’t just start my journey to learn about neurodiversity: their frustrations began my journey to learning I was neurodivergent!4 The most common version of this that I have experienced is when a student who has ADHD is given an extra week to finish their assignment. But when that student’s particular executive function struggle is around starting their assignment, the extra week actually makes things worse for them. For me to be able to support them in ways that actually improves their learning access and, even, potentially equips them with the skills required to manage their own learning processes better, would require they disclose their condition to me—which is precisely what Accessibility Services protects them from having to do. This isn’t Accessibility Services’ fault. They are also overworked, understaffed, underfunded and often doing the best they can in a wider university context that is oriented more towards legal compliance when it comes to disability than actual student care.5 Throughout this essay, I use a blend of person-first language, identity-first language, language related to the medical model for disability and even the pathologizing paradigm, as well as language related to the social disability model to refer to myself. I have made each choice in context to convey something particular about my experience. When speaking in general, though, and despite the more common use of person-first language in disability theology, I will use identity-first language like enabled and disabled, neurotypical and neurodivergent people, following Nick Walker’s critique (see https://neuroqueer.com/person-first-language-is-the-language-of-autistiphobic-bigots/).6 Brown and Leigh link academics’ tendency to minimize/avoid using their vacation time and/or sick leave with how values of research, teaching and good institutional citizenship get deployed to normalize overwork. Research shows that while “academics with disabilities or illnesses work hard to hold onto their academic work and identity whilst compromising other aspects of their life…non-academic individuals with similar health challenges reported that work was the first thing they dropped to maintain their personal lives and relationships.” (Brown & Leigh, Citation2018: 986–987). Further, while we don’t yet have hard data on academic versus non-academic rates of divorce, the significant anecdotal evidence has led to more people calling for research into the relationship between academic workloads, gender and marital dissolution (Boufis, Citation1999).7 The term, ‘supercrip’ was coined by disability advocate and writer, Eli Clare, to demonstrate two forms of ableism: one everyday and one exceptional. For the everyday version, wider society interprets disability as a challenge to overcome, and thus interprets people with disabilities as superheroes—simply for living their lives. At the same time, wider society might only value people with disabilities when they’re able to demonstrate the exceptional as a source of inspiration for nondisabled people (e.g., climbing Everest, world leader in theoretical physics, running across Canada with one leg while dying of cancer). See Eli Clare, “The Mountain,” in (Clare, Citation2015).8 As my psychiatrist was writing my accessibility support letter, she had me practice the phrases: “I want to succeed at/be excellent at my job,” and “My psychiatrist says these are the accommodations I need to meet all the expectations of and/or excel in the workplace.” She warned me not [to] link the accommodations in any way to my own survival or wellness. “And definitely don’t mention your kids,” she added.I use these phrases in every accommodations-related meeting I have. They are the best advice I have to offer to other scholars seeking to secure their own accommodations. Frame every request with the way it helps you serve the institution. And practice your framing before any meeting. Because it’s going to feel awful to prioritize the institution over your own wellness as you try to secure your own survival.My other advice is not to underplay your needs—which my psychiatrist noted I was doing. I insisted that I wasn’t, but realize now that I was lying to her and to myself. I was afraid to ask for “too much.” Disabled, neurodivergent, and chronically ill people are always afraid of asking for or being “too much.” We have to stop that.9 It’s worth noting here, that my personal ‘accommodations’ are actually just a formal re-statement of the provincial labor laws where I live. Indeed, it was difficult to explain to my psychiatrist and human resources representative why my only chance of having a forty hour work week, daily thirty minute lunch breaks plus two other fifteen-minute breaks, and personal time to attend medical appointments (I didn’t even bother trying to ask for formal sick days) would be to request it via the Accessible Canada Act (ACA, Canada’s equivalent to the ADA), rather than via the provincial labour laws that already guaranteed it.10 A pre-pandemic, non-scientific study of Canadian professors found that we work an average of 48 hours per week (Brownell, Citation2018), a number that increased by at least 10 hours per week during the pandemic (Austin-Smith, Citation2020). Attending to the US (where the faculty workload situation is more bleak than in already-bleak Canada), a survey conducted by MIT in 2001 compared university faculty and CEOs regarding workload questions. 78% of faculty reported that “no matter how hard they work, they can’t get everything done” whereas on 48% of CEOs said the same. Furthermore, 62% of faculty reported “feeling physically or emotionally drained at the end of the day” compared to 55% of CEOs ((Berg & Seeber, Citation2016: pg. 16).11 I recognize that the terminology “crazy” can be ableist. It can also be reclaimed as empowering, which some of us in the “mad” community are doing. I use it here to self-describe because it’s one of the ways I identify. I would not, however, use it to describe anyone who hasn’t intentionally claimed it for themselves.12 I wasn’t diagnosed with ADHD until halfway through the term when I taught this course, at which point I shared about that in ad hoc ways as well whenever it felt relevant to our shared teaching and learning.13 The process of writing this article helped me figure out how to articulate and transfer these decolonizing, crip approaches into my redesign of the MDiv Integrative Seminar I am teaching this semester. They are even more interwoven into the structural pedagogical design of the course now, which has led me to move them from the syllabus’ ‘accessibility’ portion into the course and assignment descriptions—syllabus sections that the students and I have begun to refer to as “Natalie’s pedagogical manifesto” for shorthand.14 I wish I had good news or even just advice for specifically junior scholars here trying to navigate these same systems. I’ve only been tenured for about five years, but the precarity my generation faced seems like the golden years now compared to what post-pandemic junior scholars in theological education are dealing with. Particularly concerning is that by the point of tenure in an academic career, we’ve so internalized the propensity to overwork that it’s difficult to recognize our role in reproducing overwork’s normalization for each other and for the next generation. This is why it’s so important for those of us who do have institutional security not only to try to change these oppressive systems, but also to find ways to provide safe cover for junior colleagues navigating them as they’re currently rigged.15 Whereas a medical model for understanding disability sees a bodily impairment as a problem to be solved, a social model for understanding disability interprets the social conditions that make it impossible for people with impairments to flourish as the problem. So, whatever made my colleagues laugh are the same social conditions that make our shared flourishing impossible. And it’s those social conditions that need to change.16 A number that will surely increase thanks to the growing phenomena of Long-COVID and Post-Covid conditions.17 I should note that after sharing the draft of this article with our leadership, conversations in my context seem to be opening up. I’m hopeful!18 One of the peer reviewers for this article rightly pointed out that it ends on the desire for flourishing without theologizing what flourishing is. I agree with the reviewer that the article would be strengthened if I did that theological work. Instead of strengthening the article, though, I’m going to leave it just a little bit weak: not out of performative solidarity, but out of genuine need.I could just ignore the reviewer’s excellent suggestion. No one would have known. But I do have just enough energy to write this footnote.Yesterday I discerned that some institutionally marginalized students required ‘above and beyond’ care. Offering that care took an emotional and physical toll on me that I’m paying for today—the day I set aside to deal with the ‘flourishing edits’. I’m also close to my accommodated 40 hours for this week, this article is due, and I don’t want to make more work for this journal issue’s editors by missing the deadline.Knowing about my brain injury (which makes dealing with words difficult), Erin Rafferty, one of those editors, extended the generous offer to help me get it across the finish line. She has a lot on her plate too, though, so I wanted to find a way not to take her up on it. So, here I must extend gratitude to my writing group (Colleen Shantz, Michael O’Conner and Reid Locklin, especially Reid) who gave me emotional and intellectual support, as well as specific line edit feedback on this article’s penultimate draft, and to my research assistant Mike MacKenzie who proofread it for me. Their support let me finish up without Erin’s help. It takes a (neurodiverse) village!I don’t intend this footnote to set a precedent for authors just to articulate why they didn’t get everything done or just to shove what they didn’t get to into a note at the end of an article. But, I would direct the reader to the Canadian Journal of Theology, Mental Health, and Disability, where their experimentation with neuro-affirming forms of academic publishing has led them to include questions for readers to ponder at the end of their articles.And then, I would remind the reader that this paper already contains multiple stories that illustrate the “relational accountability” required for “meaningful access” playing about across the power differentials of a teacher and students who got to feel that not yet future hope before we thought it. It would also explain that the purpose of autoethnography isn’t to construct an argument that convinces the reader of a new idea but, rather, its purpose is to tell stories that compel the reader towards a new action. And I would ask you: what might the already not yet version of flourishing look like for you?