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A deaf child struggles to read lips and speak instead of communicating with American Sign Language. A visually impaired student is instructed to read large-print books or listen to audiotapes instead of learning Braille. Expected to read at the same speed as their classmates, many learning-disabled students avoid reading altogether, according to an article published in the Harvard Educational Review. Ableism, “the devaluation of disability,” can “result in societal attitudes that uncritically assert that it is better for a child to walk than roll, speak than sign, read print than read Braille, spell independently than use a spell-check, and hang out with nondisabled kids as opposed to other disabled kids.” In “Eliminating Ableism in Education,” Harvard Graduate School of Education lecturer Thomas Hehir describes the effects of ableism in education and outlines ways to begin improving educational outcomes for students with disabilities. Hehir examines ableist practices through a discussion of the history of and research pertaining to the education of deaf students, students who are blind or visually impaired, and students with learning disabilities, particularly dyslexia. While the combined incidence of blindness, deafness, and significant physical disability is relatively rareless than 1% of the total population of school-aged childrenabout 5% of students have learning disabilities. “Ableist assumptions become dysfunctional when the educational and developmental services provided to disabled children focus inordinately on the characteristics of their disability to the exclusion of all else, when changing disability becomes the overriding focus of service providers and, at times, parents.” These assumptions, Hehir states, “not only reinforce prevailing prejudices again disability but may very well contribute to low levels of educational attainment and employment.” Time spent attempting to change a disability diverts the students’ and the instructors’ attention away from learning the curriculum. In addition, a negative societal attitude toward performing activities in ways that might be more efficient for disabled people, such as reading Braille or using sign language, may add to educational deficits. “Programs for students [with disabilities] often focus on the characteristics of their disability to the exclusion of their total educational needs,” Hehir says. Recommendations
Background For More Information For More Information Respond to this press release with an e-mail to the editor HGSE News, Harvard Graduate School of Education
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