“Disabled or Not, People Just Want to Feel Welcome”: Stories of Belonging from College Students with Intellectual Disability

IF 0.6 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Laura T. Eisenman, Rosalie Rolón-Dow, B. Freedman, A. Davison, Nefetaria A. Yates
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

As part of a larger storytelling project with college students belonging to minoritized social groups, nine young adults from an inclusive college program for students with intellectual disability (ID) participated in narrative interviews. All were invited to tell stories about campus incidents of microaggression and microaffirmation related to their disability. They also were invited to tell stories about other social identities they claimed. Stories were analyzed thematically and for correspondence with findings from previous studies involving other social identity groups. Students told a variety of stories about interpersonal incidents on campus that made them feel respected or disrespected. They also shared stories of institutional encounters that influenced their sense of acceptance at the university. Although they told more stories about microaffirmations, they were not immune to microaggressions. However, many of the students’ microaffirmation stories placed importance on not being perceived as different rather than a clear affirmation of disability identity. Students’ stories have implications for fostering a campus climate where students with ID are respected and included and where ableism is addressed in substantial ways.
“残疾与否,人们只是想感受到受欢迎”:智障大学生的归属感故事
作为一个针对少数群体大学生的更大的讲故事项目的一部分,来自一个面向智障学生(ID)的包容性大学项目的9名年轻人参加了叙述访谈。所有人都被邀请讲述与他们的残疾有关的校园微攻击和微肯定事件的故事。他们还被邀请讲述他们声称的其他社会身份的故事。这些故事按主题进行分析,并与之前涉及其他社会身份群体的研究结果相对应。学生们讲述了各种各样的校园人际事件,这些事件让他们感到被尊重或不被尊重。他们还分享了影响他们在大学接受感的机构遭遇的故事。虽然他们讲了更多关于微肯定的故事,但他们也不能对微侵犯免疫。然而,许多学生的微肯定故事强调不被视为不同,而不是对残疾身份的明确肯定。学生的故事对培养一种尊重和包容有身份证的学生的校园氛围有影响,在这种氛围中,残疾歧视得到了实质性的解决。
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
Critical Education
Critical Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
30.00%
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