Reframing Deficit Narratives to Honor the Community Cultural Wealth of Immigrant Families of Children with Disabilities

Soyoung Park
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Abstract

Existing research suggests that immigrant families navigating the special education process are rarely positioned as powerful partners working alongside educators. This is a manifestation of the racism and ableism endemic to the United States schooling system that leads to educators viewing immigrant families from a deficit-based lens. Do these perceptions, however, match the ways that immigrant families view themselves? This qualitative participant-observation study addresses this question by exploring educators’ and families’ perceptions and positionings of immigrant families who are navigating special education. I unpack discrepant views among educators and families of 16 children labeled “English Learner” with or suspected of having disabilities. The findings indicate that the immigrant families see themselves as possessing tremendous community cultural wealth (Yosso, 2005), which counters the deficit-oriented view the educators have of them. I argue for a reframing of the common narratives surrounding immigrant families in special education away from deficit-based conceptions towards ones that honor the strengths, knowledge, and assets of the families.
重塑赤字叙事,尊重残疾儿童移民家庭的社区文化财富
现有研究表明,在特殊教育过程中,移民家庭很少被定位为与教育工作者并肩工作的强大伙伴。这是美国学校教育体制中普遍存在的种族主义和能力主义的表现,导致教育工作者从一种以缺陷为基础的视角来看待移民家庭。然而,这些看法是否与移民家庭看待自己的方式相符呢?这项定性参与观察研究通过探讨教育工作者和家庭对正在接受特殊教育的移民家庭的看法和定位来解决这个问题。我解读了教育工作者和 16 个被贴上 "英语学习者 "标签的残疾儿童或疑似残疾儿童的家庭的不同观点。研究结果表明,移民家庭认为自己拥有巨大的社区文化财富(Yosso,2005 年),这与教育工作者对他们的赤字导向观点相悖。我主张重新构建围绕特殊教育中移民家庭的常见叙事,从以赤字为基础的观念转向尊重家庭的力量、知识和资产的观念。
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