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Celebrating Differences, Planning Practical Experience, and Striving Toward Inclusion

Celebrating Differences, Planning Practical Experience, and Striving Toward Inclusion. Chapter 2. Introduction. Old and new ways of thinking about disability “Nothing about us without us” Engagement in experiences to broaden contact with persons with disabilities.

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Celebrating Differences, Planning Practical Experience, and Striving Toward Inclusion

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  1. Celebrating Differences, Planning Practical Experience, and Striving Toward Inclusion Chapter 2

  2. Introduction • Old and new ways of thinking about disability • “Nothing about us without us” • Engagement in experiences to broaden contact with persons with disabilities

  3. Thinking About Disability Models • Definition of disability • Perception of disability identity • Use of terminology • Basis for service delivery • Purpose of service delivery • Appropriate symbols

  4. Medical, Deficit, or Categorical Model • Federal law defined specific disability categories and criteria • Categorical is less pejorative than deficit • Addressing both strengths and weaknesses

  5. Social Minority Model • Disability rights perspective • Developed in the 1980s • Examine beliefs of persons with disabilities • Stigma - any indicator of difference • Stigmatization - hurtful actions • Oliver - expand theory to describe, explain, and predict societal change

  6. Social Minority Model • Strategies to manage stigmata • Passing • Denial • Colluding • Covering • Withdrawal • Help to preserve diminishing self-esteem

  7. Ecological Model • Individual differences model • Complexity of assessment and changing person-environment interactions • Emphasis on differences as a product of interactions between persons and their social and physical environment • Collaborative and sustained efforts needed to eliminate barriers and maximize enablers

  8. Empowerment • Interactional process by which persons, groups, and societies acquire the vision, motivation, resources, and power to strive toward being the best they can be • Personal best

  9. The Meaning of Symbols • Active versus passive • Symbol of access - accessibility standards have been met • Symbols affect perceptions and attitudes

  10. Planning Practical Experience • Diverse experiences to acquire knowledge • Practicum experiences • Service learning • Internships • Equal-status relationships • Collaborative teamwork • Field trips

  11. Types of Practical Experiences • University-based programs • School-based programs • After-school sport programs • Observation/participation in IEP or IFSP meetings • Internships at camps or disability sport programs • One-to-one experiences (friendships)

  12. Reflective Thinking and Knowledge Construction • Reflective writing to demonstrate personal meaning of new experiences • Experiential education - learning to do by doing • Reflective thinking - analyzing beliefs, effects of actions, and acquiring attitudes of open-mindedness

  13. Research on Practical Experience • Hands-on experiences • Greater perceived competence • Better attitudes towards inclusion • Difficult to measure actual competence • Various types of research utilized including surveys and qualitative action research

  14. Equal-Status Relationships • Friendships or partnerships • Any kind of collaboration • Both parties share power • Benefit to the same extent • Respect and value one another equally • Experience mutual satisfaction and enjoyment • Evolves from contact theory

  15. Defining Disability Using the International Perspective • Various definitions • Created by the social majority for various purposes • Some come from federal law in U.S.

  16. Sources of Definitions for Specialists • The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders • The International Statistical Classification of Disease and Related Health Problems • Not currently used in the United States

  17. ICF-World Health Organization: Information for Everyone • Replaced definitions in 2001 • International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health • Functioning is an interactive person-environment process

  18. 2001 Definition of Disability • Impairments - problems in body functions and structures, such as significant loss or deviation • Disabilities - activity limitations • Restrictions - barriers to participation caused by person-environment interactions • Handicaps - term no longer used by WHO

  19. Considering Labels and Contextual Factors • WHO definitions support labeling • Identification of limitations and restrictions is individualized • Interactions are used to determine eligibility for services

  20. Characteristic: A Frequently Misused Term • Characteristic - highly stable individual quality that is difficult or impossible to change • Variable - something that can be changed • Use of characteristics may cause misconceptions, prejudice, and discrimination • Consider the individuals and uniquenesses

  21. Reference to disability Disabilities as superhuman Do not sensationalize a disability Avoid labeling persons into a group Use first-person terminology Avoid using emotional descriptors Emphasize abilities Avoid implying disease when discussing disabilities Guidelines for Speaking and Writing

  22. Lifespan Concerns • Knowledgeable across the lifespan • Lifelong practices • Study of relationships between disability and sport

  23. Individuality and Uniqueness Expressed Through Sports • Asthma and Health Problems • Clumsiness • Learning Disabilities • Mild Mental Retardation • Severe Mental Retardation • Cerebral Palsy • Paraplegic Spinal Cord Injury • Deafness

  24. Ideas to Consider About Individual Differences • Personal meaning of sport • Goals of adapted physical activity • Personal differences • Grouping is misleading • Health impairments • Similarities to persons without disabilities • Labeling and politics • Personal acquaintances • Similarities and differences to others

  25. Disability Sport and Transition Needs • Appreciation for disability sport • Transition services for students ages 14 and over • Utilize transition services to incorporate disability sport

  26. Types of Disability Sport • Not disabled sport • Disability sport - sport conducted by disability sport organizations • Broadening to encompass mainstream and reverse mainstream sport (i.e., includes athletes with and without disabilities)

  27. Types of Disability Sport • Mainstream sport - activities, events, and settings in which individuals with and without disabilities train, recreate, or compete with each other • Reverse mainstream sport - individuals without disabilities compete in disability sports

  28. Types of Disability Sport • Able-body sport - originally meant sport exclusively for athletes without disabilities, referred to as ABs • Today able-body sport means sport predominantly for ABs but cannot exclude persons with disabilities

  29. Types of Disability Sport • Special Olympics refers to a worldwide sport movement for athletes with mental retardation • Founded in Chicago in 1968 • Oldest and largest sport organization for individuals with MR • INAS-FID represents MR in Paralympics

  30. Types of Disability Sport • Paralympics refers to the worldwide sport movement for elite athletes with disabilities • Parallels the Olympics in that international Summer and Winter Games are held in the same year and country as Olympics • Governed by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) • All DSOs except for Deaf sports

  31. Types of Disability Sport • Deaf sport refers to sport governed by the Comite International des Sports des Sourds and national affiliates for athletes with a hearing loss of 55 decibels or greater in the better ear • Deaflympics are held in the year after the equivalent Olympic Games

  32. Types of Disability Sport • Wheelchair sports refers to sports conducted in wheelchairs for athletes with spinal paralysis or lower limb amputations • Term evolved out of sports conducted at the Stoke Mandeville Sports Centre in Aylesbury, England • Governed by the International Stoke Mandeville Wheelchair Sports Federation

  33. Paralympic Sport Organizations and U.S. Equivalents • ISMWSF • ISOD • CP-ISRA • IBSA • INAS-FMH

  34. Recreational Sport • Various settings for recreational sports • Predominately AB • Predominately disability sport • Parallel involvement • Integrated activities • Unified sport in Special Olympics • Challenger Division Baseball

  35. Barriers to Recreational Sport • Various barriers to participation • No companion or friend to share experience • Lack of money • Lack of transportation • Inadequate exposure and lack of socialization • Lack of role models

  36. Level of Disability Concerns in Sport • Utilize level of spinal cord injury for classification for sport • Numerical sport classifications • Broader terms

  37. Common Disability Sport Terms • Quadriplegia/tetraplegia • Paraplegia • Diplegia and triplegia • Hemiplegia • Functional walking (community/household) • Prosthesis • Orthosis

  38. Time-of-Onset Concerns in Sport • Reflects sport socialization and experiences that influence self-esteem and self-actualization • Congenital - present at birth • Acquired - occurs after birth

  39. Learning About Wheelchairs and Ambulatory Devices • Wheelchairs and cycles • Motorized chairs • Medical model chairs • Skills for pushing people in wheelchairs • Crutches, canes and walkers

  40. Wheelchairs and Cycles • Styles vary by sport depending on purpose • Various characteristics of sport chairs • Low backs • No push handles • Increased camber • Rigid frames • Personal measurements are used to fit chairs

  41. Motorized Chairs • Utilized by persons with severe disabilities • Various characteristics of motorized chairs • Obtain speeds of about 5mph • Climb some inclines • Generally battery-powered (must be recharged) • Heavy • Portability may present problems

  42. Medical Model Chairs • Utilized by persons with severe disabilities • Various characteristics of medical model chairs • Generally used in residential facilities and for elderly • Have push handles • Not appropriate for sports

  43. Skills for Pushing People in Wheelchairs • Ask permission before pushing • Handling brakes • Removing armrests and foot plates • Pushing a person in a chair • Opening and closing the chair

  44. Crutches, Canes, and Walkers • Assistive devices require considerable arm and shoulder strength • Utilized by various disabilities • Crutches are either axillary or forearm • Axillary crutches should not be used for sport

  45. Inclusion in General Physical Education • Individuals with and without disabilities work, play, and learn together in positive, meaningful, and satisfying ways • 95% of school-age population with disabilities participate in general physical education

  46. Barriers to Inclusion(Negative Attitudes) • Mostly human and require changing beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors • Environmental barriers can be removed with vision, commitment, and persistence • Professionals need to understand negative phenomena

  47. Stigmatized Social Minority • Who is the social minority? • Individuals are marginalized in physical education because of poor sports skills or unacceptable social behaviors • Teachers must employ specific strategies to promote inclusion

  48. Prejudice • Results in biased attitudes, feelings, and/or beliefs toward a particular person or group • Results of prejudice include social isolation, questioning competence, and restricted participation • Conveys to individual that they are inferior or unworthy

  49. Stereotypes • Exaggerated beliefs about the sameness of everyone in a group • Stereotyping is associated with the use of characteristics • Learned stimulus-response reaction • Generalizations instead of individualization

  50. Discrimination • Unequal treatment or access, founded in prejudice or ignorance, that devalues persons or denies opportunity on the basis of group membership or social role • Valorization - increasing the value, respect, and dignity of social roles • Normalization replaced by valorization

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