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引用次数: 0
摘要
心理健康在学术界是一个有些禁忌的话题。凯蒂-罗斯-盖特-普赖尔(Katie Rose Guest Pryal)是一位患有双相情感障碍和自闭症的作家兼学者,她在新书《塔中之光》(A Light in the Tower:A Light in Tower: A New Reckoning with Mental Health in Higher Education》(堪萨斯大学出版社现已出版)一书中写道:"根据学术界的逻辑,如果我的大脑出了问题,那么我的一切都是错的"。她认为,精神残疾在高等教育中被污名化,并被推入阴影之中,而解决精神残疾危机的关键--普赖尔更喜欢的术语--是提高整体的无障碍性,而不仅仅是为教师和学生提供便利。这可以减少人们对他们疾病的偏见。
Examining A Light in the Tower: A New Reckoning with Mental Health in Higher Education
Mental health is a somewhat taboo topic in academia. As Katie Rose Guest Pryal, a bipolar and autistic author and academic, writes in her new book A Light in the Tower: A New Reckoning with Mental Health in Higher Education (available now from University Press of Kansas), “Based on the logic of academia, if my brain is wrong, then everything about me is wrong.” She argues that mental disability is stigmatized in higher education and pushed into the shadows and that the key solution to the mental disability crisis — Pryal's preferred terminology — is to increase accessibility overall rather than just provide accommodations for faculty and students. This can decrease the stigma around their illnesses.