Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood

The purpose of this manuscript is to view, through an autoethnographic lens, the role of adult education, distance education, and assistive technology on identity changes that take place when becoming disabled in young adulthood within the context of internal and external forces on the development o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kragness, Jon A.
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10365/24877
id ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-24877
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-248772021-09-28T17:11:42Z Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood Kragness, Jon A. The purpose of this manuscript is to view, through an autoethnographic lens, the role of adult education, distance education, and assistive technology on identity changes that take place when becoming disabled in young adulthood within the context of internal and external forces on the development of identity. Constructs were used to delineate the evolutionary sense of one’s identity which includes: (1) once formed, one’s sense of identity is relatively stable; (2) environmental variables and constraints will create shifts in identity; and (3) internal drives, abilities, and motivations play an important role in the evolution of identity. Each of these constructs was then examined at different levels of identity that included one’s Public Identity, Private Identity, Personal Identity, and Self Identity. Information was gathered through a number of personal narratives and historical documents that could then be viewed through the lens of the constructs above. By examining these constructs, findings indicated that successfully rebuilding identity after acquiring a serious disability was greatly influenced by strong supports and opportunities available and the internal capacity to make use of them. There was no one specific support that was the only catalyst in this rebuilding. Instead, the complete network of support including adult education, distance education, social supports, and family support was at the heart of successfully rebuilding identity. Minnesota Department of Vocational Rehabilitation North Dakota State Board of Higher Education 2015-04-21T17:13:24Z 2015-04-21T17:13:24Z 2015 text/dissertation movingimage/video http://hdl.handle.net/10365/24877 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf video/quicktime application/pdf North Dakota State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
description The purpose of this manuscript is to view, through an autoethnographic lens, the role of adult education, distance education, and assistive technology on identity changes that take place when becoming disabled in young adulthood within the context of internal and external forces on the development of identity. Constructs were used to delineate the evolutionary sense of one’s identity which includes: (1) once formed, one’s sense of identity is relatively stable; (2) environmental variables and constraints will create shifts in identity; and (3) internal drives, abilities, and motivations play an important role in the evolution of identity. Each of these constructs was then examined at different levels of identity that included one’s Public Identity, Private Identity, Personal Identity, and Self Identity. Information was gathered through a number of personal narratives and historical documents that could then be viewed through the lens of the constructs above. By examining these constructs, findings indicated that successfully rebuilding identity after acquiring a serious disability was greatly influenced by strong supports and opportunities available and the internal capacity to make use of them. There was no one specific support that was the only catalyst in this rebuilding. Instead, the complete network of support including adult education, distance education, social supports, and family support was at the heart of successfully rebuilding identity. === Minnesota Department of Vocational Rehabilitation === North Dakota State Board of Higher Education
author Kragness, Jon A.
spellingShingle Kragness, Jon A.
Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
author_facet Kragness, Jon A.
author_sort Kragness, Jon A.
title Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
title_short Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
title_full Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
title_fullStr Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Life in the Slow Lane: An Autoethnography of Identity Development Following Disability in Young Adulthood
title_sort life in the slow lane: an autoethnography of identity development following disability in young adulthood
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10365/24877
work_keys_str_mv AT kragnessjona lifeintheslowlaneanautoethnographyofidentitydevelopmentfollowingdisabilityinyoungadulthood
_version_ 1719485512699346944