政治化的自我宣传:残疾学生在高等教育中的健康主义期望

Emunah Woolf, Alise de Bie
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引用次数: 1

摘要

学生自我倡导文献通常声称,尽管自我倡导是残疾学生在中学后教育中取得成功所需的一项重要技能,但这些学生中的许多人在这方面存在严重的“技能缺陷”。本文试图通过提出将自我宣传“政治化”的机会来干预这篇文献,并摆脱其个人的、以赤字为重点的方法。为此,该论文报告了加拿大一所研究密集型大学的定性研究结果。对11名残疾学生的采访揭示了一种看法,即有一种制度认可的自我倡导“正确方式”,包括期望:(1)注册正式住宿;(2) 体现明显/身体残疾;(3) 表现不那么残疾;以及(4)让他人感到舒适。这些有害的期望植根于能力主义,将残疾误解为可预测和可见的,并给学生带来负担,要求他们为那些自我倡导的人提供方便。作为对这些能力主义期望的一种抵抗,学生们描述了他们自己在校园里协商自我倡导和残疾问题的“更好的方式”。这种“更好的方式”通过认识到能力主义和自我倡导模式的危害,肯定残疾学生的知识和社区,并制定他们的制度变革愿景,为自我倡导“政治化”提供了机会。对这种政治化至关重要的是,要摆脱工作人员和非残疾人主导的举措,如自我倡导培训,以解决学生个人的技能不足问题。将自我宣传政治化,转而将残疾学生作为充分的合作伙伴,根据他们的集体生活专业知识和战略实践,开展研究,为学生服务和员工培训提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Politicizing self-advocacy: Disabled students navigating ableist expectations in postsecondary education
The student self-advocacy literature commonly claims that although self-advocacy is a vital skill that disabled students require to succeed in postsecondary education, many of these students experience a significant ‘skills-deficit’ in this area. This paper seeks to intervene in this literature by proposing opportunities to ‘politicize’ self-advocacy and move away from its individual, deficit-focused approach. To do so, the paper reports findings from a qualitative study at a research-intensive Canadian university. Interviews with 11 disabled students revealed a perception that there is an institutionally endorsed ‘right way’ to self-advocate that included expectations to: (1) register for formal accommodations; (2) embody visible/physical disability; (3) perform less disabled; and (4) make others comfortable. Rooted in ableism, these harmful expectations adopt misconceptions of disability as predictable and visible, and burden students with demands that they make their self-advocacy convenient for those to whom they are self-advocating. As a form of resistance to these ableist expectations, students described their own ‘better way’ of negotiating self-advocacy and disability on campus. This ‘better way’ offers opportunities for ‘politicizing’ self-advocacy by recognizing ableism and the harms of the self-advocacy model, affirming disabled student knowledge and community, and enacting their visions for institutional change. Vital to this politicization is a move away from staff and nondisabled-led initiatives like self-advocacy training to address a perceived skills-deficit in individual students. Politicizing self-advocacy moves instead towards disabled students as full partners in conducting research and informing student services and staff training based on their collective lived expertise and strategic practices.
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