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Brad Bierdz – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2024
This article delves into the processes of disability disclosure, cripped experiences and a particular theoretical flight with posthuman subjectivity. The article critiques disability disclosure for coercively reifying cripped experiences into normative narratives. Moreover, disclosures determine coercive and performative regimes in educational…
Descriptors: Self Disclosure (Individuals), Disabilities, Humanism, Experience
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Kara G. Hollins; Sarah L. Schlessinger – Reading Teacher, 2024
Educators who take an inclusive, anti-ableist stance value human variation. Teaching in pursuit of anti-ableism requires open dialogue about aspects of human diversity, complex social identities, and the contributions of people with disabilities. In this column, we build from the rich work exploring ableism via children's literature in order to…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Social Bias, Negative Attitudes, Disability Discrimination
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Rachelle M. Johnson – Grantee Submission, 2023
There has been relentless debate as to whether dyslexia is a gift, and specifically, if dyslexics are more creative than the average person, despite established research evidence that there is no difference in creativity between those with and without dyslexia. With this paper, I outline that this conversation is not that simple, and one must…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Attitudes, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Emma Rose McCadden – Topics in Language Disorders, 2024
The neurodiversity movement is reshaping how we conceptualize neurodevelopmental differences--emphasizing the inherent value of diverse neurological experiences and advocating for meaningful societal inclusion. This article explores the neurodiversity paradigm and considers its implications for the evaluation of social stories intervention based…
Descriptors: Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Inclusion, Advocacy, Social Integration
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Collinson, Craig – British Journal of Special Education, 2022
Lexism (the Othering of dyslexics) currently lacks a clear definition. In this conceptual article, I argue that Lexism does not require any such definition; indeed definitions generally can be unhelpful. To understand Lexism I provide examples of how we might use the concept in a series of hypothetical cases. Exemplars avoid the need for…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Definitions, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Bias
Soyoung Park – Harvard Education Press, 2025
In "(Re)Imagining Inclusion for Children of Color with Disabilities," Soyoung Park argues that the disproportionate segregation and isolation of children of color with disabilities from their nondisabled peers is the product of an educational system which upholds a racist, ableist agenda. Park puts forth a visionary call to end these…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Minority Group Students, Students with Disabilities, School Segregation
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Vivienne Orchard; Eleanor K. Jones – Power and Education, 2025
This article uses 'wellbeing' as deployed within UK higher education as a starting point for examining the relationship between disability and the university. We explore various strands of scholarship that seek to critique wellbeing, universities, and/or connections between disability and these institutions. Work on 'wellbeing' identifies the…
Descriptors: Well Being, Higher Education, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Foreign Countries
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David Ben Shannon – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
In this paper, I draw from an in-school music research-creation project to consider the complex, racist-ableist politics of failure in the early childhood classroom. I theorise failure as it unfolds through anxiety, which I conceptualise as an affect of failure, to discuss both the perverse possibilities and perilous precarities of (neuro)queer…
Descriptors: Music, Musical Composition, Special Education, Affective Behavior
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Liu, Nicholas – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2023
Evolving discourse about autistic individuals swims in murky territory, with ongoing debates over how the autistic community should represent itself and how the neurotypical population should engage with them. One tendency that has emerged is the depiction of autistic individuals as kind and well-intentioned but also simpleminded and guileless.…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Bias, Misconceptions
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María Rosa Brea-Spahn; Xigrid Soto-Boykin; Kat Pérez; Shakira M. Pérez; Nemesis Salguero Pérez; Mridula Anandhakrishnan; Erica Saldivar Garcia – Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups, 2025
Purpose: In recent years, the importance of embedding children's racial, cultural, and ability identities has received greater attention in the field of speech-language therapy. Picture books have become one common way of embedding children's identities in therapy sessions. Picture books are a powerful tool for sharing communities' identities,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Picture Books, Language Usage, Ideology
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Raaper, Rille; Peruzzo, Francesca; Westander, Mette – Power and Education, 2023
The neoliberal rationale in English higher education promotes institutional and individual competition for economic success, often at the cost of equity and universalism. Within such context, there is a tendency to formalise student voice, for example, through professionalisation of students' unions. This paper argues that neoliberalism and its…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Activism, Neoliberalism, Higher Education
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Shogren, Karrie A. – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2023
The right to science has been identified in multiple human rights treaties; however, there has not been a clear framework for how governments or research organizations can advance this right particularly ensuring equitable engagement of people with intellectual disability (ID) in the "process" of scientific research. Although the…
Descriptors: Science Education, Inclusion, Intellectual Disability, Civil Rights
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Snipstad, Øyvind Ibrahim Marøy – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2022
Background: People with intellectual disability are often defined as a vulnerable group. The feminist philosopher Jackie Scully argues that vulnerability is often associated with qualities such as immaturity, helplessness, victimhood, passivity and so forth. As research is a social activity, the qualities associated with vulnerability affect…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Victims, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Catherine Kramarczuk Voulgarides; Susan Larson Etscheidt; David I. Hernández-Saca – Educational Review, 2024
In this re-review, we discuss a global-wide paradox of disability rights that claims adherence to human and civil rights frameworks while cultural, linguistic, racial, and ethnic disparities in special education outcomes remain unaddressed. We propose a multi-dimensional framework for understanding how the described inequalities persist, despite…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Special Education, Students with Disabilities, Attitudes toward Disabilities
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Rodgers, Jess; Thorneycroft, Ryan; Cook, Peta S.; Humphrys, Elizabeth; Asquith, Nicole L.; Yaghi, Sally Anne; Foulstone, Ashleigh – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
Within Australian universities, neoliberalism has transformed education into a marketplace and product, where academic employees are regulated and controlled through metrics, productivity, and pressure to maintain and increase 'value'. In this environment, disabled academics face increasing barriers to workplace participation and meaningful…
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Bias, Higher Education, Universities
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