Disability and Self-Advocacy Experiences in University Learning Contexts

IF 1.7 Q2 REHABILITATION
C. Bruce, M. Aylward
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Disabled students in Canadian universities are usually taught that they must develop the ability to discuss their disabilities and assert their rights if they want to achieve academic success. Yet this individualized skills-based approach can privilege deficit-focused methods and impose hierarchical and mutually anxiety-provoking student-faculty relationships. This study documents the experiences of disabled students and their professors arranging academic accommodations by exploring the relational necessities of student self-advocacy and how they shape experiences of teaching and learning at three Nova Scotia Universities. Findings expose the existence of formal self-advocacy teaching alongside informally communicated behavioural expectations. They also make evident the often unrecognized relational complexities inherent in claiming disability rights, navigating university process, and meeting expectations around student sharing of disability and accommodation information.
大学学习环境中的残障与自我倡导经验
加拿大大学的残疾学生通常被教导,如果他们想在学术上取得成功,就必须培养讨论自己的残疾并维护自己权利的能力。然而,这种基于技能的个性化方法可能会优先考虑以赤字为重点的方法,并强加层次分明、相互焦虑的师生关系。本研究记录了残疾学生及其教授在新斯科舍省三所大学安排学术住宿的经历,探讨了学生自我倡导的关系必要性,以及他们如何塑造教学体验。研究结果表明,在非正式交流行为期望的同时,还存在正式的自我倡导教学。他们还表明,在申请残疾权利、引导大学进程以及满足学生共享残疾和住宿信息的期望方面,往往存在着未被认识到的内在关系复杂性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
16 weeks
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