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Disability: sameness and difference Kirsten Stalker University of Strathclyde Faculty of Education Professorial Lecture Series 18 November 2008
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2 Britain’s Missing Top ModelBritain’s Missing Top Model: the contestants Picture removed for copyright reasons http://www.bbc.co.uk/apps/vision/gallery/assets//miss ingmodel/thumb_126/group_photoshoot2.jpg
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3 The lucky winner Picture removed for copyright reasons http://www.bbc.co.uk/apps/vision/gallery/assets//miss ingmodel/thumb_126/153247.jpg
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4 Quotes on sameness/ difference Professional talking about children with learning disabilities: They’re not like normal children, you see. Teenager/ wheelchair user: We’re just the same. We just can’t walk, that’s all the difference.
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5 Quotes on sameness/ difference Teenager with learning disabilities: How come I’m different from my brothers and I’m stupid and how come my nephew can count and I can’t and he’s 7? Sibling talking about her disabled sister: She’s different but it’s normal for us.
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6 Quotes on sameness/ difference Young man: My disability encompasses all of me: it is central to my identity. Teenager (girl): Every normal kid has to grow up and have freedom and so do we. And if we make mistakes, we make mistakes; we’re just like any other kid.
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7 Quotes on sameness/ difference Adult with learning disabilities: I don’t know if it’s kind o’ a threat that we’re different…there just seems to be this ‘because [you’re] different, we’re going to treat you different’…it doesn’t matter what disability a person has, everybody’s got a right to have access wherever they’ve got to go to.
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8 Theorising Difference 1.Correcting/ challenging false generalisations which are implicit in much classic thought about everyday life - Calhoun et al (2002)
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9 Theorising Difference 2: Questioning whether certain social categories that we often take for granted really have objective and stable meanings - Calhoun et al (2002)
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10 Theorising Difference 3: Thinking about the role which the ideas attached to certain categories may play in structuring society itself - Calhoun et al (2002)
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11 1: Correcting false generalisations Study of disabled children’s everyday lives 26 children aged 7 -15 Range of impairments Attending mainstream and special schools Used variety of communication methods Connors and Stalker 2007
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12 2: Does disability have an objective and stable meaning? Children experienced disability in 4 ways: Impairment Physical barriers Other people’s attitudes The management of difference
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13 Children’s views “That's it. I’m in a wheelchair so just get on with it. Just get on with what you’re doing” (boy aged 9 ) “I don’t mind if it’s wee boys or girls that look at me but if it’s adults…they should know. It’s as if they’ve never seen a wheelchair before and they have, eh?” (boy aged 14)
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14 Children’s views “No. I just bully them back. Or if they started kicking us, I’d kick them back.” (young boy with learning disabilities)
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15 Children’s views Mother: “He was telling me the other day how they did the fire alarm and everybody was screaming out in the playground. Richard was still in the school. He was saying ‘Mum, I was really really worried about what happens if there’s a real fire’. No-one came to his assistance at all.”
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16 Children’s views Girl “…there’s signing, where everyone signs, all the teachers, all the children. Researcher : Why is that better than going to a school with hearing children? Girl : Hearing children – no one signs. I don’t understand them and they don’t understand me”.
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17 3: The role which ideas attached to certain categories may play in structuring society itself Ideas attached to the category ‘learning disability’ ‘othering’ and exclusion care and protection justice and rights
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18 Some concluding thoughts about… the role of research common sense understandings of disability social constructionist view of disability significance of impairment a continuum of impairment?
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19 Concluding thoughts no objective stable meaning of disability differences among disabled people the way we think about disability has profound influence on everyday lives celebrating difference and diversity
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20 Thank you for listening!
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