Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory

Notwithstanding the prominent focus on inclusion in the discourse of special education, students with significant intellectual disabilities in North America continue to receive a part of their education in segregated contexts (G. L. Porter, 2008; Schwartz, Mactavish & Lutfiyya, 2006; P. Smith, 2...

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Main Author: Schwartz, Karen Debra
Other Authors: Lutfiyya, Zana Marie (Education)
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4415
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-44152014-03-29T03:43:19Z Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory Schwartz, Karen Debra Lutfiyya, Zana Marie (Education) Mactavish, Jennifer B. (Education) Hansen, Nancy (Disability Studies) Dodd, Janice (Physiology) students intellectual disability education personhood disability studies discourse theory Notwithstanding the prominent focus on inclusion in the discourse of special education, students with significant intellectual disabilities in North America continue to receive a part of their education in segregated contexts (G. L. Porter, 2008; Schwartz, Mactavish & Lutfiyya, 2006; P. Smith, 2010). This situation creates an interesting and perplexing anomaly that I attempt to reconcile through an examination of the discursive conceptualizations of these students in Canadian introductory special education textbooks. My study is framed within (a) the academic field of disability studies, which re-imagines disability using new perspectives (Linton, 1998; Oliver, 1996), and (b) new philosophical concepts of “personhood”, which critique traditional definitions of personhood based on intellectual ability (Carlson, 2010; Carlson & Kittay, 2009; Nussbaum, 2006). Situated within social constructionism and discourse theory (Laclau & Mouffe, 2001), this analysis examines how students with significant intellectual disabilities are depicted in these textbooks. The language used in portraying these students suggests a discourse of individual pathology, medicalization and professionalization, distancing students with significant intellectual disabilities from other students because of their perceived lack of abilities, needs and behaviours. This discourse relies heavily on traditional understandings of people with significant intellectual disabilities as lacking in value. There is little discursive evidence to suggest that these students are presented in ways that challenge either historical or modern conceptualizations. 2011-03-02T21:03:04Z 2011-03-02T21:03:04Z 2011-03-02T21:03:04Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4415 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic students
intellectual disability
education
personhood
disability studies
discourse theory
spellingShingle students
intellectual disability
education
personhood
disability studies
discourse theory
Schwartz, Karen Debra
Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
description Notwithstanding the prominent focus on inclusion in the discourse of special education, students with significant intellectual disabilities in North America continue to receive a part of their education in segregated contexts (G. L. Porter, 2008; Schwartz, Mactavish & Lutfiyya, 2006; P. Smith, 2010). This situation creates an interesting and perplexing anomaly that I attempt to reconcile through an examination of the discursive conceptualizations of these students in Canadian introductory special education textbooks. My study is framed within (a) the academic field of disability studies, which re-imagines disability using new perspectives (Linton, 1998; Oliver, 1996), and (b) new philosophical concepts of “personhood”, which critique traditional definitions of personhood based on intellectual ability (Carlson, 2010; Carlson & Kittay, 2009; Nussbaum, 2006). Situated within social constructionism and discourse theory (Laclau & Mouffe, 2001), this analysis examines how students with significant intellectual disabilities are depicted in these textbooks. The language used in portraying these students suggests a discourse of individual pathology, medicalization and professionalization, distancing students with significant intellectual disabilities from other students because of their perceived lack of abilities, needs and behaviours. This discourse relies heavily on traditional understandings of people with significant intellectual disabilities as lacking in value. There is little discursive evidence to suggest that these students are presented in ways that challenge either historical or modern conceptualizations.
author2 Lutfiyya, Zana Marie (Education)
author_facet Lutfiyya, Zana Marie (Education)
Schwartz, Karen Debra
author Schwartz, Karen Debra
author_sort Schwartz, Karen Debra
title Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
title_short Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
title_full Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
title_fullStr Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
title_full_unstemmed Understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
title_sort understanding conceptualizations of students with "significant intellectual disabilities": an analysis using discourse theory
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/4415
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