Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities

Students with disabilities are quantitatively under-represented in higher education. In this paper, focus is on access to and processes in transition to the initial period at university. The article is based on an empirical study examining young people's points of view, and the overall aim is t...

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Main Author: Lena Lang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2013-07-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sjdr.se/articles/513
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spelling doaj-410db9139df848ff89da4834fbd3772b2020-11-24T23:49:37ZengStockholm University PressScandinavian Journal of Disability Research1501-74191745-30112013-07-0117213014310.1080/15017419.2013.817355442Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilitiesLena Lang0Department of School Development and Leadership, Faculty of Education and Society, Nordenskiöldsgatan 10, Malmö, SE-205 06 SwedenStudents with disabilities are quantitatively under-represented in higher education. In this paper, focus is on access to and processes in transition to the initial period at university. The article is based on an empirical study examining young people's points of view, and the overall aim is to draw attention to experiences regarding responsibility and participation. Four narrative configurations represent the voices of how young people with disabilities experience the nature of the responsibility, the distribution of the responsibility and the timing that emerges. Experiences in the university context are categorized into proactive, ambivalent, reactive and non-existent community structures. Representatives of the universities are perceived as taking various levels of responsibility for the difficulties experienced by the young people. Genuine participation seems to be affected by collaboration qualities involving both the surrounding environment and the individual. This could have long-term consequences for the individual identity of a young person, as well as for society.https://www.sjdr.se/articles/513higher educationnarrative configurationsparticipationresponsibilityvoices of young people
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lena Lang
spellingShingle Lena Lang
Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
higher education
narrative configurations
participation
responsibility
voices of young people
author_facet Lena Lang
author_sort Lena Lang
title Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
title_short Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
title_full Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
title_fullStr Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
title_full_unstemmed Responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
title_sort responsibility and participation in transition to university – voices of young people with disabilities
publisher Stockholm University Press
series Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research
issn 1501-7419
1745-3011
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Students with disabilities are quantitatively under-represented in higher education. In this paper, focus is on access to and processes in transition to the initial period at university. The article is based on an empirical study examining young people's points of view, and the overall aim is to draw attention to experiences regarding responsibility and participation. Four narrative configurations represent the voices of how young people with disabilities experience the nature of the responsibility, the distribution of the responsibility and the timing that emerges. Experiences in the university context are categorized into proactive, ambivalent, reactive and non-existent community structures. Representatives of the universities are perceived as taking various levels of responsibility for the difficulties experienced by the young people. Genuine participation seems to be affected by collaboration qualities involving both the surrounding environment and the individual. This could have long-term consequences for the individual identity of a young person, as well as for society.
topic higher education
narrative configurations
participation
responsibility
voices of young people
url https://www.sjdr.se/articles/513
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