Parent Curriculum - Sessions
Session 1
1. Recognize their role in helping their child be successful in school and in life
2. Increase their knowledge about child’s needs
3. Increase their knowledge of self, what strengths they have to offer child, and what
they need to build within themselves to meet the needs of their child
4. Increase knowledge, awareness, and understanding of viewpoints of others involved
in the IEP process
5. Identify support connections, and use effective problem-solving to make decision.
Session 2
1. Increase understanding of students’ rights and responsibilities in school and parent’s
rights and responsibilities
2. Increase their use of effective problem-solving
3. Recognize in and out of school that can help their child learn better
4. Increase understanding of resources available to help them support their child’s
educational goals
Session 3
1. Increase their cultural/social capital for navigating the future of their child
2. Increase understanding of how to effectively access and maximize the resources
available to them
Session 4
1. Increase their cultural/social capital for navigating the future of their child
Designing culturally appropriate self-determination curricula
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2. Increase understanding of how to effectively access and maximize the resources
available to them
Session 5
1. Increase understanding of the social and cultural meanings of disability
2. Increase understanding of the laws that apply to disability and special education and
how to effectively use these as support resources
3. Learn the content of an IEP
Session 6
1. Improve preparation for an IEP meeting
2. Use effective self-advocacy for children
Following are the steps we recommend to develop a culturally appropriate self-
determination curriculum for students.
Step 1: Formulate a team of curriculum specialists, transition specialists, and
cultural brokers.
Identify individuals who can assist with curricular modifications appropriate for
your students. These individuals may include teachers, transition specialists, and
community members with cultural knowledge, curriculum specialists, and students, as
appropriate. It is important that you have individuals who are well connected to the
cultural context where your students reside. Elders are often quite knowledgeable and
would be appropriate to include on your team.
Step 2: Convene the team to plan process for integrating culturally-relevant
content.
All members of your team should share a common understanding of the tasks that
need to be completed. Assure that the curriculum provides cultural foundations that
enable your students to understand how their identity is influenced by their own culture
and the mainstream culture. This should include exploration of personal and family
values and history, cultural assessments, and culturally appropriate supports. Building
upon this foundation the curriculum should strengthen the student’s ability to develop
decision-making skills and strategies for communicating effectively in the mainstream
culture. These skills will promote improved skills pertaining to Individual Education
Plans (IEP’s) and transition planning including goal setting, identifying needed
accommodations and resources, and leading team meetings.
Step 3: Investigate relevant evidence-based practices.
Members of the team should become familiar with evidence-based practices
pertaining to transition, self-determination, curriculum development and modification,
culturally appropriate instructional design, and delivery. Use this knowledge in
completing the development process. Your students may benefit from materials
presented in certain formats or approaches, based upon their cultural orientation.
Step 4: Select an appropriate curriculum or create one that addresses all
dimensions of self-determination.
Test and his colleagues (2000) outlined eight components that should be included
in a self-determination curriculum. These include “choice/decision-making; goal setting
and attainment; problem solving; self evaluation, observation and reinforcement; self
advocacy; inclusion of self-directed IEP; relationships with others; and self awareness”
(Test, p. 48). A wide range of self-determination curricula for students exist, and a
number of those have been field-tested and critiqued in the literature. You may also
want to design your own curriculum, although this process can be time intensive.
Step 5: Translate key topics and terminology into the native language as
appropriate in all materials.
Karen L. Applequist, Kelly D. Roberts, Hye-Jin Park
326
Translating core concepts into their native language will enhance your students’
understanding of critical constructs related to self-determination and transition planning.
Figure 1 illustrates translations of a lesson for Native Hawaiian students. You may
want to adjust the terms you translate if your students are more acculturated or are not
fluent in their native language.
Step 6: Locate resources and materials that will support teachers in
implementingthe curriculum.
This step is particularly important if teachers are not very knowledgeable about
the cultural heritage of their students. Additional articles or visual materials will
enhance presentation of lessons in a manner that is culturally appropriate. This step is
also important to consider after piloting the curriculum and reviewing feedback from
students and teachers.
Step 7: Find and insert appropriate graphics or work with students to create
them.
Graphics of cultural symbols, depiction of familiar settings, people, or activities
and geographical representations are important additions to the modified curriculum.
For example, graphics for the student curriculum for Navajo students featured cultural
art, photos of traditional homes, and members of their tribe.
Step 8: Pilot the curriculum, soliciting feedback from teachers and students.
You can choose to solicit feedback from students as you progress through the
curriculum, or wait until you have completed all of the units. We met with both
teachers and students discuss their perspectives of the units and lessons. Teachers may
want to take notes after each unit to note possible changes and to track what went well.
Step 9: Modify the curriculum as needed.
If only minor changes are needed, this can probably be handled by one or two
people. It may be necessary to re-convene your committee to discuss further curricular
modifications.
A similar approach is recommended for developing a parent curriculum. Identify
a team of individuals with expertise in the cultural beliefs and practices, educational
curriculum development, and transition. A cultural broker is selected who is a member
of the community who is also a parent of a child with a disability. The cultural broker is
trained to establish personal relationships with other parents and work with them in
identifying and resolving conflicts and misunderstandings that may be hindering
collaboration with professionals. The cultural broker will meet with a group of parents
and introduce cultural activities honoring cultural traditions and facilitate a respectful
group setting in which parents can learn more about their role in transition and student-
directed IEPs.
The team identifies appropriate cultural activities for sessions establishing a safe
and welcoming environment that would encourage parents to make meaning of their
roles and contributions in supporting their children within their unique cultural contexts.
For example, Native Hawaiian parents make a lei, Alaskan Native parents make a song
and dance, and Navajo parents make a cradle board. Native language is used as
appropriate to represent different concepts. For example, native words for collaboration
may be more meaningful to participants.
Following are the steps involved in the Session 1 activity for Native Hawaiian
parents. Notice how self awareness is promoted through the shared activity (making the
lei) and the use of Native Hawaiian language and constructed meanings.
The following is a sample activity for lesson 1 of curriculum for native Hawaiian
parents:
Designing culturally appropriate self-determination curricula
for students and parents
327
1. Pule (prayer)
2. Discuss the lei as a metaphor for family empowerment.
3. Provide materials parents will need to make a lei (string, needles, flowers, or ti
leaves).
a. Discuss the representations of each element of the lei: Talk story about family
genealogy, and personal narrative. Explain the ‘lei string’ or the ‘ewe’ umbilical cord to
demonstrate how everything is connected together. How the ‘ewe is our connection to
the past, present and future with family and where we live (our sense of place).
b. Ask participants to identify and describe their place/relationship within their `ohana
(extended family unit); relationship to and with their kupuna (elders), who they are
accountable to and responsible for and their sense of place. (This may be done at home
with a graphic outline/guide to bring back for the next session).
c. Discuss mookuauhau (genealogy) because that is our source for what we know today,
for what our kuleana (personal responsibilities) is, and for further perpetuation what
ispono (our sense of order, balance, and doing the right thing).
d. The aina (land) and our sense of place help us to connect. Give overview of how
Hawaiians viewed their environment. This overview is important to give personal
power to the parents. Is the environment inanimate or animate, living or dead? It’s
alive. Hawaiians gave names to everything (land, wind, rain, cloud, and ocean, and
plant) to personalize
,
to acknowledge their life essence. From the time you are born,
respect for the environment translates to having respect for other things, like one’s
social environment, spiritual environment, etc.
4. Instructions: Participants will select their materials, and they will prepare their
materials (cut string/cord, select flowers)
a. Discuss building awareness by looking at differences. The reasons Parent A selected
a variety of flowers, versus Parent B possibly selected only one type of flower, or the
string/cord length.
b. Relate these differences to viewpoints, values, school, and home cultural values.
5. The group can choose what flowers or pattern (try to have at least 3 types of
flowers) to use.
a. Relate these choices to problem solving and decision-making.
6. Collect the material the participants prepared and hold them in a lei container
for the next class activity (only necessary if utilizing the curriculum over many
sessions).
7. Pass out handouts for activities participants should research/do and bring back
to next session.
8. Start to teach parents the lei chant. Teach parents that they have a unique voice.
Manakaleo- power in their voice. I kaolelokeola, i kaolelokamaka-in the word is life, in
the word is death. Chant especially written for them by Kawena and is used to celebrate
and honor their child. Reaffirm their commitment to doing what is necessary for their
child to succeed.
Teachers and transition specialists can and should support their students to
become more active participants in transition planning. If we want our students to
become more empowered (Jones, 2006), we must reach all students by using more
culturally sensitive approaches with students from indigenous or immigrant
communities. Including parents in this process strengthens the student-school
connections, and also assists in bridging the gap, that often exists, between home and
school culture.
Steven E. Brown
328
References
1.
Black, R.,Leake, D. (2011). Teacher’s views of self-determination for students with
emotional/behavioral disorders: The limitations of an individualistic perspective. International
Journal of Special Education, 26(1), 147-161.
2.
Ewalt, P.L., Mokuau N. (1995). Self-determination from a Pacific perspective.SocialWork,
40(2), 168-175.
3.
Frankland, H.C., Turnbull, A.P., Wehmeyer, M.L.,Blackmountain, L. (2004). An exploration
of the self-determination construct and disability as it relates to the Dine’ (Navajo)
culture.Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 39(3), 191–205.
4.
Goode, T. D., Sockalingam, S., Snyder, L. L. (2004). Bridging the cultural divide in health
care settings: the essential role of cultural broker programs.National Center for Cultural
Competence.
5.
Jones, M. (2006). Teaching Self-Determination.Teaching Exceptional Children, 39(1), 12-17.
6.
Landmark, L.J., Zhang, D. D., & Montoya, L. (2007). Culturally diverse parents’ experience
in their children’s transition: Knowledge and skills. Career Development and Transition for
Exceptional Individuals, 30(2), 68-79
7.
National Secondary Transition Technical Assistance Center (2013).Secondary Transition
Evidence-Based Practices and Predictors of Post School Success.
8.
Test, D.W., Karvonen, M., Wood, W.M., Browder D., &Algozzine, B. (2000). Choosing a
self-determination curriculum.Teaching Exceptional Children, 33(2) 48-54.
WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? DISCOVER THE PRECIOUS TREASURE
Steven E. Brown
(Institute on Disability Culture,
University of Hawai at Manoa)
Аңдатпа
2016 жылдың қыркүйек айында мені Тайваня мүгедектерінің құқысы бойынша
Ассоциациясы спонсор болған «Біз қалай бармыз, сондаймыз: жарымжан адамдардың мәдени
құндылықтарға көзқарасы» тақырыбындағы конференцияға қатысуға Тайбэйге шақырды.
Конференцияның тақырыбы 1990 жылы мен жазған «Біз қалай бармыз, сондаймыз» эсседен алған
цитата түрінде ұсынылған. Конференцияда сөйлеген сөзімде жарыжан адамдардың мәдени
құндылықтар жағын көрсетуге және қазіргі кезеңде осы мәселенің эволюциясын ұсынуға
мүмкіндік туды.
Аннотация
В сентябре 2016 меня пригласили в Тайбэй принять участие в конференции на тему «Мы
такие, какие есть: Взгляд на ценности культуры инвалидов», которая спонсировалась Ассоциацией
по правам инвалидов Тайваня. Тема конференции представляет собой цитату из моего эссе,
написанного в 1990 году «Мы такие, какие есть». Выступление на конференции позволило мне
осветить зарождение культуры инвалидов и представить эволюцию этой проблемы на
современном этапе.
Annotation
In spring 2016 I was invited to present at the September 2016 “We Are Who We Are: See Our
Precious Disability Culture,” sponsored by the Taiwan Association for Disability Rights Conference, in
Taipei, Taiwan. The title of the conference is a quote from one of my 1990s essays, “We Are Who We
Are.” The conference presentation gave me a chance to both reflect on the beginnings of disability culture
and to describe aspects of its present-day evolution.
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
329
Disability Culture has evolved over the past thirty years to becoming an amazing,
vibrant, and useful concept—and agent of change--today. Before discussing what
Disability Culture looks like now, I’d first like to return 25 years ago, to 1991, when I
presented at a conference in Little Rock, Arkansas, in the U.S. At the conclusion of that
presentation (later published as “I Was Born (in a Hospital Bed)--When I Was Thirty-
One Years Old,”), I first publicly attempted to share what I meant by disability culture
in the form of this poem, “Tell Your Story:”
TELL YOUR STORY
Steven E. Brown
(c) 1995, All Rights Reserved, Institute on Disability Culture
Tell your story
Tell your story
It may bump from the page
like words of Braille
sizzling in tales of blazing glory;
it may glisten in the sunshine like the holy grail,
so tell me a tale, even if it's gory,
I'm yearning to hear you
Tell your story.
Have you heard
'bout the man
in the motorized chair?
Found no ramp at the
movie theater
did he despair?
No,
just let them dudes lift him in there.
Came back a few days later
after somethin' greater
brought with him a crew
people in chairs just grew and grew,
said they knew
they'd be part of the view;
no problem getting in,
just lift and push and
move those hunks of tin.
The chairs, they weighed a-plenty,
The ushers stressed and
strained and got somewhat benty.
Seeing the movie was not the goal
changin' the stage was the whole
they paid for gettin' in
but that theater knew it sinned.
People in chairs sealed their own personal stamp
on that theater's shimmering new wheelchair ramp.
Steven E. Brown
330
Tell your story
Tell your story
It may enrapture the floating air
like ASL singing its flair
it might even glisten like the holy grail,
but no one will set their sail
toward your tale,
even if it's hunky-dory,
unless you tell your story
Tell your story.
Once I knew a lady
got caught in a picket line
changed her whole design:
came back to her hometown
mission bound.
Told a hospital it was ailing
cause it was failing to see
good health bound in the key of
phone lines hooked up with a TDD.
Said she'd seek cooperation or
she'd be mighty angry
might even round up folks and
stoke fires of insurgency,
gather signatures and seek publicity.
You know that hospital saw the light
put an end to the no TDD blight.
Last time I saw that lady
she was waving a sign
telling a TV station
she sure did mind
no news she could see
so why should she
listen to what they wanted her to be.
Now she knows how to stick it
with a picket and her
pockets have been lined with Advocacy.
Tell your story
Tell your tale
You will find you touch
with the sureness of a crutch
a framework for your dwelling,
a story needing telling,
steaming like a sunburnt trail
glistening like the holy grail.
Who will know what you entail
unless you risk the path to glory
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
331
tell your story
Tell your story.
Does he want another cup of coffee?
I heard the waitress ask about the man.
How did I know his plan
just cause he couldn't see
didn't mean his brain rested in incompetency.
The stories he has told
brisk and bold
I've shared with more than a few
over a cup of coffee or a tall, cold brew.
The lessons are in the telling
they provide a framework and a dwelling.
We all have so many stories to bear
Cry, laugh, sing, and despair;
how will our children learn and compare
if we're too timid to dare
to raise the flare
share that we care.
Tell your story
Sing your tale
Tell our story
Shout our glory!
Tell our story
Tell our story
It may not bring fame
It may have no glory, but
cut through someone's life like a ray of sunshine
break away barriers like a layer of turpentine,
tell your story
Tell your tale
We're not as elusive as that holy grail.
A Little History
Where did the idea of Disability Culture come from?
In the United Kingdom, in 1986, the London Disability Arts Forum held its first
annual meeting where the late, great Vic Finkelstein delivered a paper called, “Disabled
People and our Cultural Development.” In it he stated that Disability Culture:
must develop spontaneously and creatively out of the collective experiences
of disabled people. The development of our own distinctive culture to express a
rounded picture of the reality of our lives will help us gain a place of our own
choosing in the multicultural society. The celebration of difference, we will
then discover, is the celebration of humanity, of being members of the human
family [15].
Around the same time, in the United States, I read from cover to cover each
edition of the groundbreaking magazine, Disability Rag. Editor Mary Johnson used the
Steven E. Brown
332
phrase “Disability Cool” and a cartoon called “Disability Rat” featured a zealous
character who pointed out abuse of handicapped parking spaces. Most significant for me
was a 1987 article called “Emotion and Pride: The Search for a Disability Culture,” in
which Johnson interviewed Carol Gill, a psychologist with a disability, who discussed
the need for a disability culture. Gill stated:
A disability culture movement can foster disability pride. It promotes pride in us;
it allows us to project a positive image to the public. We renew each other and
our strength through shared experiences and rituals. If we express our culture in
some unified way, we're signaling; we're communicating what our values, goals,
and identity are. Through our culture we can recruit people. When we present a
strong image, it motivates people to want to belong. They want to be part of
something that powerful
[18].
By the late 1980s, I realized my passion had become Disability Culture. I
perceived it as a way to combine my interests and background in history, reform, and
culture. In the spring of 1990,
I first publicly approached the idea of Disability Culture
at the National Council of Independent Living annual conference in Washington, D.C.
I conceived a panel called "Speakers of the Independent Living Movement:
Voices of Independence." Three panelists shared our stories for about forty-five minutes
with an audience of a couple hundred people. We’d left half of our time for audience
participation, but it was not enough. Everyone in the audience, it seemed, had a story
they wished to share. The energy in the room and in the halls after we concluded was
overpowering. There was no question that people were hungry for an abundance of
stories--their own and others. Leaving the room, exhilarated at the response, conversing
with co-panelist Judy Heumann (currently Special Advisor for International Disability
Rights in the U. S. Department of State) I knew I wanted to keep exploring this area.
A few days later, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, at a state independent living conference, I
facilitated a panel called simply "Disability Culture." A group of about six of us
informally discussed this idea. Did such a culture exist? If it did, was it beneficial?
What characteristics comprised such a culture? How did it affect our lives? How might
it impact nondisabled people? Each participant wrestled with these queries and offered
some tentative answers.
Later that year, I moved to California to work at the World Institute on Disability.
I stayed there for three years and continued to think about the idea of disability culture
while I worked at a Research and Training Center on Independent Living.
Between 1992 and 1994, several “firsts” relating to disability culture converged.
The first Disabled Student Cultural Center opened at the University of Minnesota;
Berkeley, California disability performance poet Cheryl Marie Wade received a
National Endowment for the Arts Solo Theatre Fellowship; and
I received the first
national fellowship to research disability culture.
In late 1993, Lil (Lillian Gonzales Brown—my wife and partner) and I moved
from California to southern New Mexico, where we created the Institute on Disability
Culture
[17].
One of the first activities of the Institute was publication of my Fellowship
research as a monograph called,
Investigating a Culture of Disability: Final Report. In
an “Executive Summary,” I wrote:
The existence of a disability culture is a relatively new and contested idea.
Not surprising, perhaps, for a group that has long been described with terms
like “in-valid,” “impaired,” “limited,” “crippled,” and so forth…. The Disability
Culture Movement is running full steam ahead. While I write, and you read,
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
333
multiplying numbers of people are creating rapidly increasing examples of
disability culture (pp. 8-9).
We also created our vision, and mission statement: “Promoting Pride in the
history, activities, and cultural identity of individuals with disabilities throughout the
world.” From that statement came our slogan, “Promoting Disability Pride.”
A Definition
In 1996, several years after beginning to talk and write about disability culture, I
published an article that included this one-paragraph definition:
People with disabilities have forged a group identity. We share a common
history of oppression and a common bond of resilience. We generate art, music,
literature, and other expressions of our lives, our culture, infused from our
experience of disability. Most importantly, we are proud of ourselves as people
with disabilities. We claim our disabilities with pride as part of our identity.
We are who we are: we are people with disabilities” [8; pp. 80-81].
Disability Culture and Independent Living
Why and how can Disability Culture be used to expand our lives, our advocacy,
and our ability to implement change? An initial response is simply if we do not
understand our own culture(s), how can we expect others to do so, let alone understand
why our culture is important to us? How can we show--and share--disability culture and
disability pride, unless we ourselves understand what they mean? About ten years ago,
Sarah Triano, once a student leader and the force behind the longest, continuing
Disability Pride parade, wrote:
Disability Pride is an integral part of movement building, and a direct
challenge to systemic ableism and stigmatizing definitions of disability. It is a
militant act of self-definition, a purposive valuing of that which is socially
devalued, and an attempt to untangle ourselves from the complex matrix of
negative beliefs, attitudes, and feelings that grow from the dominant group’s
assumption that there is something inherently wrong with our disabilities and
identity [32; pp. 476-77].
How do we show disability pride? Disability Culture? This is where we move
from the “talking head” portion of the presentation to sharing Disability Culture through
examples that demonstrate disability rights, history, talents and resources. Because
when we understand our culture(s), we can use examples from them to explain our
history, advocacy, talents, and resources, and why there are many reasons for us to be
proud of who we are—both as individuals and as a group. The remainder of this
presentation will therefore be focused on sharing examples of our Disability Culture.
Select Examples from Disability Culture
•
Dance
•
Comic Books
•
Comics
•
Comedians:
•
Museums
•
Movies
•
Literature
•
Music
•
Protests and Parades
Steven E. Brown
334
•
Music Videos
Dance: The first disability dance troupe I came across was after I moved to
California. It was the Axis Dance Company, which is described as a physically
integrated dance company, which means it includes dancers both with and without
disabilities. Axis was founded in 1987, and in the past 30 years has become
internationally known.
A dancer who has worked with this company and many others is Alice Sheppard,
a former professor of medieval studies. On her website, Alice writes:
I dance in pieces that explicitly question what we think we know
about disability, dance, and the body. I also perform in pieces that address
disability only by dint of my presence. I move in my wheelchair, without
assistive technologies on the floor, and with my crutches and wheelchair together.
Each of these modalities provides a new movement language, a new technique,
and a distinct path to virtuosity. But they are each also a pure embodiment—a
metamorphosis into a body with its own integrity and unique capacity for dance
[25].
Comic Book: I have been using the comic book Silver Scorpion in my online
classes for some time now. The creation of a group of American and Syrian youth in
2010, the Silver Scorpion is an Arabic, Muslim comic book hero who lost his legs in a
land mine accident. I like the way this hero was created, the fact that he comes from
another culture and that his story continued beyond the original comic book.
Comics: Department of Ability. Comics are also a part of the Disability Culture.
This particular one I chose as an example a parent following a daughter’s wishes. As
described on the Department of Ability website:
This gang of Superheroes, use their disabilities as their super powers.
Disabled children deserve to be represented in books and on TV in a positive way.
Without sad music in the background accompanying their story.
Children with disabilities are funny, exciting, happy, sad, mischievous, rude,
caring.
Just like any other child
I have created the Department Of Ability and am in the process of writing a
comic, to be released in 2016/2017. I also hope to get it onto TV, so that ALL
children, (not just ones with special needs) can watch enjoy, relate to, and realise
that the child who lives down the street, is just the same as them. Just with a
difference [33].
Comedians: Josh Blue, is an American comedian with Cerebral Palsy who won
an American TV show called Last Comic Standing. I have used one of his appearances
on the show in my courses when I can find the captioned version, which is sometimes
available and then seems to disappear.
Museums: The Smithsonian National Museum of American History, which is
one of a group of national museums in Washington, D.C., has featured disability-related
exhibits for many years now. Several years ago, the Museum initiated an online exhibit
called, “Everybody: An Artifact History of Disability in America.” On the webpage
titled “Place” a historic and well-known poem, “Disabled Country,” by my friend Neil
Marcus is featured. Neil doesn’t recall exactly when he wrote this poem, but it was
sometime in the mid-1980s.
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
335
“Disabled Country” (n.d.)
by Neil Marcus
If there was a country called disabled, I would be from there.
I live disabled culture, eat disabled food, make disabled love,
cry disabled tears, climb disabled mountains and tell disabled stories.
If there was a country called disabled,
Then I am one of its citizens. I came there at age 8. I tried to leave.
Was encouraged by doctors to leave. I tried to surgically remove myself from disabled
country but found myself, in the end,
staying and living there.
If there was a country called disabled,
I would always have to remind myself that I am from there. I often want to forget. I
would have to remember...to remember.
In my life's journey I am making myself
At home in my country [22].
Movies: While many popular movies have included disability as a focus, the
actual portrayals are not usually what disability advocates want to see. Therefore, I want
to share some less well-known aspects of movies and disability. First, while I’m
personally not a fan of horror movies, zombies, or vampires, I couldn’t help but be
impressed by what I read about a movie called,
Spring Break Zombie Massacre. Created and starring two teenagers with
intellectual disabilities, who met in grade school at a Special Olympics, and funded via
Kickstarter, this movie is described as the ultimate teen zombie movie. The pair are
heroes with bionic superpowers who are the only ones able to stop the zombies [29].
Quite different are the efforts of transgender, disabled director Dominick Evans,
who has over 21,000 followers on Twitter and runs a regular Twitter conversation about
film called #FilmDis. This is described as a discussion of “Equality in Film in front of
and behind the camera” [14].
Finally, filmmaker and parent, Dan Habib’s 2009 documentary, Including Samuel,
featured his son and four other families who experience disabilities:
Before his son Samuel was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, photojournalist
Dan Habib rarely thought about the inclusion of people with disabilities.
Now he thinks about inclusion every day. Shot and produced over four years,
Habib’s award-winning documentary film, Including Samuel, chronicles the
Habib family’s efforts to include Samuel in every facet of their lives. The film
honestly portrays his family’s hopes and struggles, as well as the experiences
of four other individuals with disabilities and their families. Including Samuel
is a highly personal, passionately photographed film that captures the cultural
and systemic barriers to inclusion [16].
Literature: There is a lot of literature featuring disability, including my own
work. One of my favorite sites these days is called, “Disability in Kidlit”, which is, “is
dedicated to discussing the portrayal of disability in middle grade and young adult
literature. We publish articles, reviews, interviews, and discussions examining this topic
from various angles—and always from the disabled perspective” [9].
Music: In February 2015, in a blog called, “My Top 25 Disability Pride Songs,” I
wrote:
I love music, and as someone who came of age as a protester in the
late 1960s and early 1970s, I appreciate how music, protest, culture, and change,
Steven E. Brown
336
connect…. In compiling these songs, I included a variety of genres, cultures, and
countries, because musicians with disabilities are creating in all of them and
because, with international access, those of us in the U.S have access to, and are
influenced by, what is happening all over the world [6].
This seems like a great place to recognize the work of my friend, Leroy Moore,
founder of the Krip Hop Nation. While Krip Hop takes its name in part from its
revolutionizing of Hip Hop music, it is also self-described as “More than Music.” And
in that sense, I want to share Leroy’s article, “New Term Using History Internationally
to come up with the Present: AfroKrip:”
In my vision there is a process or steps to get to AfroKrip. AfroKrip
at the highest level is a common political stage where the person is comfortable
with their identity as a person with a disability and are throwing off the
mainstream brainwashing of overcoming or hiding disability to also reach
beyond themselves to others for community and discovery of history building
on arts and struggles of our African disabled ancestors [24].
As we discuss Disability Culture(s) it is vital to recognize that there is not a
monolithic Disability Culture. There are, like with disabilities themselves, dynamic,
constantly changing, and newly-discovered disabilities—and cultures, such as Leroy
describes above.
While I’m a bit older than Leroy, there are a whole slew of activists in the U.S.,
who describe themselves as Generation ADAers. One of those young folks is a black
woman named Vilissa Thompson, who’s created a stir with blog posts via her website,
“Ramp Your Voice!” Vilissa, who I know from the Internet, writes that she will use
“Ramp Your Voice!” to:
spotlight the issues and barriers of people with disabilities, as well as create
effective social and political changes to ensure that all people have the ability
to succeed and prosper, regardless of their ability, ethnicity, religion,
socioeconomic status, educational level, or place of origin [31].
Thompson has been doing this with posts like, “#DisabilityTooWhite: Making the
“Good Trouble” in Advocacy,” in which she also created the Twitter hashtag
“#DisabilityTooWhite.” She described why she did this:
Alice Wong, a dear friend and fellow advocate, shared an article about disability
and beauty that showcased the “standard” imagery of beauty for disabled women:
disabled White women. In Alice’s tweet and response, she shared her
frustration regarding the lack of diverse representation about who we are as a
collective group, and I and many others, chimed in with similar sentiments.
While I was tweeting my thoughts, an idea popped into my mind, and I started
writing #DisabilityTooWhite in my tweets [30].
This hashtag quickly went viral and the conversation continues. Which given the
presence of both Vilissa and Alice is no shock.
I didn’t know, or know of, Alice Wong before moving the Bay Area in 2014, but I
quickly learned about her. We have become friends, but it is also fair to say I’m a huge
fan of Alice and her work. A year or two ago, when we in the U.S. were thinking of
different ways to celebrate the 25
th
anniversary of the signing of the ADA in 2015,
Alice conceived the Disability Visibility Project, which is described as:
an online community dedicated to recording, amplifying, and sharing
disability stories and culture. The DVP is also a community partnership with
StoryCorps, a national oral history organization. One individual, Alice Wong,
runs the DVP (with the support of several volunteers). Our aim is to create
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
337
disabled media that is….intersectional, multi-modal, and cross-platform. Like a
virus invading a host organism, stories by disabled people can alter the structure
and very DNA of mainstream media. Transformative culture change from the
inside/outside/every direction [12].
Alice also has the distinction of being the first person to visit the White House
robotically [27].
Parades and Protests: When I was a young(ish) advocate in the 1980s, I met a
woman from Boston who talked about and implemented a Disability Pride Parade in
1990. Unfortunately, she died young and so did that Parade. But then Sarah Triano, of
the “Disability Pride” definition, became a primary force in developing Disability Pride
Parades in Chicago in the early 2000s. The first was held in 2004 and has been an
annual tradition every since. It has also grown and I had the pleasure of being Grand
Marshal in the 2005 Chicago parade and marching a few years later in a Stockholm
parade.
Parades and Protests may have similar themes: gathering to celebrate; marching to
protest. ADAPT has been around since the early 1980s, first protesting the lack of
wheelchair accessible buses and over the years moving to a focus on community
integration. Photographer Tom Olin, who has been at many ADAPT protests, is often
considered the foremost photographic chronicler of the Disability Rights Movement
[11].
In discussing this presentation a question I was asked was how disability culture
can be used to create change. I hope that you have seen ways that can happen. But I
would also ask of each of you the following questions that may be useful in your
everyday lives to use disability culture to create change. For example:
1. How would you create disability culture?
2. Can you facilitate the creation of culture?
3. How would you use examples of disability culture of which you’re already
aware to create more disability culture?
4. How would you use Disability Culture to create change?
Three Taiwanese women combined protest and culture. Sandie Yi and Sleeve Yu
protested in front of the Taiwan National Theatre and Concert Hall (NTCH). This
building is being renovated after 30 years and a banner on the building reads “See You
Next Spring (NTCH is scheduled to reopen in Spring 2017). The building is closed for
renovation after 30 years of operation, but NTCH ignored the fact that they need to provide
12 wheelchair accessible seats by law (they had 5 and were going to add only one more).
NTCH argued that adding wheelchair seats would affect the acoustic quality, create barriers
to emergency evacuation and cause loss of revenues. Sandie provided real case studies and
used examples from The Kennedy Center in the U.S. to counter some of the arguments
presented by NTCH. NTCH was asked to respond to the demands of adding wheelchair
seats within one month. After the meeting, Yi and Yu and a few disabled activists began
critiquing NTCH via social media and attracted supporters and fellow-activists to join the
fight. While waiting for NTCH to respond, Sandie and Sleeve then initiated an online photo
event, asking people to share their experiences with attending inaccessible arts and culture
events. They also asked people to name their hopes and dreams for a better and accessible
arts and culture experience. They invited people to write their own words on paper and
photograph themselves in front of the arts and culture venues (Personal Communication,
August 2, 2016).
Grace Chang protested in front of the National Museum and Opera House about a
lack of more seats for those using wheelchairs. Her protest poster read “Equal Rights for
Steven E. Brown
339
Participating Culture. Give us more wheelchair seats.” According to the Accessibility
Act to Public Buildings the building lacks a required 19 seats, but there have been no
fines or penalties. (Personal Communication, July 31, 2016).
What ways might you use Disability Culture to celebrate, protest, and/or create
change?
Music Videos: Another example of Disability Culture is one of my favorite
videos, Mobility International’s “Loud, Proud and Passionate!” which shows women
from all over the world creating change. A line from the video perhaps may be a
Manifesto for how Disability Culture can be used for change: “Making our dreams
come true, knocking down the barriers; changing the world, there’s nothing we
can’t do” (
Thank you and let’s all move forward Promoting Disability Pride!
References:
1.
ADAPT. Retrieved from www.adapt.org.
2.
Axis Dance Company. (nd). Retrieved from http://www.axisdance.org/.
3.
Blue, Josh. (2006-2016). Retrieved from http://www.joshblue.com/.
4.
Brown, Steven E. (2003). "I Was Born (in a Hospital Bed)--When I Was Thirty-One Years Old," in
Movie Stars and Sensuous Scars: Essays on the Journey from Disability Shame to Disability Pride.
New York: iUniverse.
5.
Brown, Steven E. (1994). Investigating a Culture of Disability: Final Report. Institute on
Disability Culture. Available at:
https://www.academia.edu/6421438/Investigating_a_Culture_of_Disability_Final_Report.
6.
Brown, Steven E. (Feb. 2015). My Top 25 Disability Pride Songs. Retrieved from
http://www.instituteondisabilityculture.org/manifesto/-my-top-25-disability-pride-songs.
7.
Brown, Steven E. (1995). “Tell Your Story.” In Pain, Plain--and Fancy Rappings: Poetry from the
Disability Culture. Institute on Disability Culture. Retrieved from.
8.
Brown, Steven E. (2003). “We Are Who We Are…So Who Are We?” Movie Stars and Sensuous
Scars: Essays on the Journey from Disability Shame to Disability Pride. New York: iUniverse.
9.
Disability in Kidlit. (nd). Retrieved from http://disabilityinkidlit.com/.
10.
Disability Rag. Now accessible online via Ragged Edge Online at http://www.ragged-edge-
mag.com/.
11.
Disability Rights Center. Retrieved from https://disabilityrightscenter.wordpress.com/projects/
12.
Disability Visibility Project. Retrieved from https://disabilityvisibilityproject.com/.
13.
“Everybody: An Artifact History of Disability in America.” (nd). Smithsonian National Museum of
American History. Retrieved from https://everybody.si.edu/.
14.
Evans, Dominick. (2007-2014). Retrieved from http://www.dominickevans.com/.
15.
Finkelstein, Vic. 1987. "Disabled People and our Culture Development." First published in DAIL
(Disability Arts in London) Magazine, 1987. Retrieved from
http://www.independentliving.org/docs3/finkelstein87a.pdf
16.
Habib, Dan (nd). Including Samuel. Retrieved from http://www.includingsamuel.com/.
17.
Institute on Disability Culture. www.instituteondisabilityculture.org.
18.
Johnson, M. (1987), Emotion and pride: The search for a Disability Culture. Disability Rag,
January-February, pp. 4-10.
19.
Josh Blue-Last Comic Standing (captioned version-sometimes available). Retrieved from
http://www.overstream.net/view.php?oid=tbu8ujrsutlc.
20.
Last Comic Standing. (July 10, 2016). Retrieved from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Last_Comic_Standing.
21.
Little, Laurie (May 7, 2010). Disability Pride Parade. Retrieved from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXAwfg0jgdU&feature=related.
22.
Marcus, Neil (nd). Disabled Country. Retrieved from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8CLrv8dd-E&feature=youtu.be.
23.
Mobility International. (Jan. 4, 2011). Loud, Proud and Passionate! Retrieved from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxxomUVsSik.
24.
Moore, Leroy. (June 1, 2016). New Term Using History Internationally To Come Up With The
Present
–
AfroKrip.
Retrieved from http://kriphopnation.com/new-term-using-history-
internationally-to-come-up-with-the-present-afrokrip/.
What is disability culture? Discover the precious treasure
339
25.
Sheppard, Alice. (nd). Retrieved from http://alicesheppard.com/.
26.
Silver Scorpion. (2011). Retrieved from http://www.scribd.com/doc/54720383/Silver-Scorpion.
27.
Souza, Pete. (July 20, 2015). Telerobot Meets President Obama At The White House For The First
Time. IFLScience! Retrieved from http://www.iflscience.com/technology/robot-meets-president-
obama-white-house-first-time/.
28.
Spring Break Zombie Massacre. (2016). Retrieved from
http://www.springbreakzombiemassacre.com/.
29.
Squires, John. (July 1, 2016). Teenage Friends Unleash a Spring Break Zombie Massacre; Watch
the Trailer! Retrieved from http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/174551/teenage-friends-unleash-
spring-break-zombie-massacre-watch-trailer/.
30.
Thompson, Vilissa. (May 26, 2016). #DisabilityTooWhite: Making the “Good Trouble” in
Advocacy. Retrieved from http://rampyourvoice.com/2016/05/26/disabilitytoowhite-making-good-
trouble-advocacy/.
31.
Thompson, Vilissa (nd). Ramp Your Voice. Retrieved from http://rampyourvoice.com/.
32.
Triano, Sarah. Disability Pride. Encyclopedia of Disability (2006). Gary Albrecht, Ed. Thousand
Oaks, CA: 2006, pp. 476-77. Retrieved from http://www.disabilityprideparade.org/page-122470.
33.
White, Dan. (2016). Department of Ability. Retrieved from https://www.departmentofability.com/.
34.
Wolfe, Kathi. (2012). Disability Pride Fast Becoming Genuine Cause for Celebration.
Independence Today. Retrieved from http://www.itodaynews.com/2012-issues/june2012/disability-
pride.htm.
М.Қозыбаев атындағы Солтүстiк Қазақстан мемлекеттiк университетiнiң хабаршысы
Меншік иесі: ҚР Білім және ғылым министрлігінің «Манаш Қозыбаев атындағы Солтүстiк Қазақстан
мемлекеттiк университетi» ШЖҚ РМК. №13405-Ж есепке алу туралы күәлігін 2013 жылдың 25
ақпанында ҚР Мәдениет және ақпарат министрлігі берген.
Басылуға 11.11.2016 ж. қол қойылды. Пішімі 60×90 1/8. Times гарнитурасы.
Кілемі 42,4 б.т. Таралымы 60 дана. Кітап-журнал қағазы. Тапсырыс №192.
М.Қозыбаев атындағы СҚМУ баспаханасында басылды. 150000, Петропавл қ., Пушкин к., 86.
Вестник Северо-Казахстанского государственного университета им. М.Козыбаева
Собственник: РГП на ПХВ «Северо-Казахстанский государственный университет
имени Манаша Козыбаева» МОН РК. Свидетельство о постановке на учет №13405-Ж
от 25 февраля 2013 г. выдано Министерством культуры и информации РК.
Подписано в печать
11.11.
2016 г. Формат 60×90 1/8. Гарнитура Times.
Объём 42,4 усл.печ.л. Тираж 60 экз. Бумага книжно-журнальная. Заказ №192.
Отпечатано в СКГУ им. М. Козыбаева. 150000, г. Петропавловск, ул. Пушкина, 86.
Bulletin of M.Kozybayev North Kazakhstan State University
Owned by Republican State Enterprise «M.Kozybayev North Kazakhstan State University».
Certificate no.13405-
Ж issued by Ministry of Culture and Information of the Republic of Kazakhstan
on 25 February, 2013.
Signed for publishing on 11/11/2016. Size: 60x90 1/8. Font type: Times. Volume: 42.4 conventional lists.
Number of copies: 60. Order no. 192. Printed on office paper by M. Kozybayev NKSU Press, 86, Pushkin
street, Petropavlovsk, Kazakhstan, 150000.
Document Outline - Редколлегия Вестника №3(32) 2016 г. по Педагогическим наукам
- СЕВЕРО-КАЗАХСТАНСКИЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ УНИВЕРСИТЕТ ИМЕНИ М.КОЗЫБАЕВА
- Вестник
- Редакционная коллегия серии:
- СЕВЕРО-КАЗАХСТАНСКИЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ УНИВЕРСИТЕТ ИМЕНИ М.КОЗЫБАЕВА
- Вестник
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. Содержание
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 8-58 стр.
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 59-110 стр.
- Организация интеракций в системе профессиональной подготовки будущего педагога предполагает ведущую роль преподавателя. При этом от преподавателя требуется высокий уровень квалификации, позволяющий не руководить, а управлять взаимодействиями, так как ...
- С 70-80-х годов 20-го века происходит переосмысление форм и методов профессиональной подготовки будущего педагога. Предпочтение отдаётся субъект-субъектным отношениям, взаимодействиям в интерактивном режиме.
- Демократический характер формирования формальных и неформальных групп, свобода выбора, атмосфера сотрудничества и сотворчества с коллегами мотивирует к поиску более эффективных средств педагогической деятельности, расширяет возможность самореализации ...
- Известно, что деятельность педагогов любого уровня сопряжена с высокими эмоциональными нагрузками. В процессе специально организованных подготовленными специалистами педагогических взаимодействий наряду с основными целями и задачами решаются сопутству...
- Продуктивность совместных действий находится в прямо пропорциональной зависимости от рациональности разделения труда и гибкости координации. Во всех групповых действиях различные участники выполняют разные функции, но их действия интегрируются в колле...
- Таким образом, одним из важных направлений профессиональной подготовки будущих педагогов с точки зрения компетентностного подхода является организация различных вариантов педагогических интеракций, что вместе с тем является и необходимым условием непр...
- Таким образом, если в процессе организации прогулок с дошкольниками 5 – 6 лет с общим недоразвитием речи использовать разработанные проблемные ситуации, то это будет способствовать повышению уровня сформированности коммуникативной функции речи, так ка...
- 1. Закон РК «Об образовании» от 27.07.2007 № 319 – III. 22TUhttp://www.zakon.kzU22T
- 2. Послание Президента Республики Казахстан народу Казахстана -«48TКазахстанский путь – 2050: Единая цель, единые интересы, единое будущее», 2014.48T 22TUhttp://www.akorda.kzU22T
- 3. Закон РК «О социальной и мeдико-пeдагогичeской коррeкционной поддeржкe дeтeй с ограничeнными возможностями» от 11.07.2002. 22TUhttp://online.zakon.kzU22T
- 4. Кудрявцeв В.Т. Запорожeц А.В.: от идeи самоцeнности дeтства - к принципам самодeтeрминации и амплификации дeтского развития. - М.: Просвещение, 2005. - 120 с.
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- 10. 7TПавлова О.С.7T Формированиe коммуникативной дeятeльности старших дошкольников с общим нeдоразвитиeм рeчи. - М.: МОСУ, 2007. - 96 с.
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- Литература:
- 2. У севастопольских школьников нет мотивации к изучению родного языка (31.08.2008). [Электронный ресурс] Режим доступа: .http://novocrimea.ru/sevas/204174.html
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 111-207 стр.
- Литература:
- 2. У севастопольских школьников нет мотивации к изучению родного языка (31.08.2008). [Электронный ресурс] Режим доступа: .http://novocrimea.ru/sevas/204174.html
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 208-285 стр. НОВЫЙ
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 286-295 стр. НОВЫЙ
- Вестник №3(32) 2016г. 296-339 стр. НОВЫЙ
- УДК 372.853:004
- МЕТОДИЧЕСКИЕ АСПЕКТЫ ПРИМЕНЕНИЯ СИСТЕМ АВТОМАТИЧЕСКОГО ТЕСТИРОВАНИЯ ПРОГРАММ
- В ОБРАЗОВАТЕЛЬНОМ ПРОЦЕССЕ
- Введение
- Теория
- Практическая часть
- Подготовка тестовых наборов и пакета задачи
- Выводы
- “Disabled Country” (n.d.)
- 8. Brown, Steven E. (2003). “We Are Who We Are…So Who Are We?” Movie Stars and Sensuous Scars: Essays on the Journey from Disability Shame to Disability Pride. New York: iUniverse.
- 10. Disability Rag. Now accessible online via Ragged Edge Online at http://www.ragged-edge-mag.com/.
- 11. Disability Rights Center. Retrieved from https://disabilityrightscenter.wordpress.com/projects/
- 12. Disability Visibility Project. Retrieved from https://disabilityvisibilityproject.com/.
- 13. “Everybody: An Artifact History of Disability in America.” (nd). Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Retrieved from https://everybody.si.edu/.
- 14. Evans, Dominick. (2007-2014). Retrieved from http://www.dominickevans.com/.
- 24. Moore, Leroy. (June 1, 2016). New Term Using History Internationally To Come Up With The Present – AfroKrip. Retrieved from http://kriphopnation.com/new-term-using-history-internationally-to-come-up-with-the-present-afrokrip/.
- 25. Sheppard, Alice. (nd). Retrieved from http://alicesheppard.com/.
- 27. Souza, Pete. (July 20, 2015). Telerobot Meets President Obama At The White House For The First Time. IFLScience! Retrieved from http://www.iflscience.com/technology/robot-meets-president-obama-white-house-first-time/.
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