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Please check, just in case…. APA Tip of the Day: Quotes. When you want to use a quote, you must: Include the quote exactly as written (note exceptions for capitalization of first word, final punctuation, and quotes within quotes).
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APA Tip of the Day: Quotes When you want to use a quote, you must: • Include the quote exactly as written (note exceptions for capitalization of first word, final punctuation, and quotes within quotes). • Enclose the quote in quotation marks (unless 40 or more words). • Provide the page number, either directly before or after the quote. • Include the author(s) last name and year of publication.
However! If you find a quote that is taken from another source, look up the original – do not include quotes that one author has taken from another except in very special cases. So, whenever possible: • Paraphrase the material. • If the quote is a must, use the original source. • Include the page number where you read it.
Announcements • Reading review due now. • Don't forget your plagiarism certificate next week. You must turn that in in order to stay enrolled in the class. • Your language diary is due on Feb. 27. Don’t wait to get started. • Note taking is very important in this class. Do not just rely on the overheads. Take time during the quiet times to think over what we talked about and summarize.
January 30, 2014 Contrasting perspectives: etic, emic, and cultural differences Today’s Readings: Sleeter (1986), Rao (2006), and Molloy & Vasil (2002)
Social Construction of Disability This perspective holds that there is not a one-to-one correspondence between an individual’s condition and the extent to which, if at all, he/she is considered to have or considers him-herself to have a disability. Rather, a disability is formed on the basis of a complex interplay of a variety of internal and external factors.
Aimee Mullins TED Talk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTwXeZ4GkzI
Social Construction of Disability = Condition: Down syndrome Spinal cord injury Dyslexia Disability: Intellectual disability, language or social limitations Mobility limitations Learning disability, academic dysfunction, work performance limitations
Social Construction of Disability http://www.nfbct.org/html/learn.htm “The National Federation of the Blind of Connecticut believes blindness is merely an inconvenience and, with proper skills and training, a blind individual can obtain success in his or her personal and professional life.”
Social Construction of Disability • Training • Adaptive devices • Compensatory strategies • Lack of above • Attitudes • Assumptions • Cultural beliefs Condition Disability
Social Construction of Disability • Ill-prepared or poor teachers • Inconsistent or no access to high-quality ALS • Negative assumptions about: child’s ability, home, and family resources Condition: Bilingual Minority Low SES Disability: LD BD CommDis Not Gifted
Quick Write: What perspectives presented in the articles were disturbing for you or raised issues that you aren’t yet ready to resolve? What ideas were new or thought provoking for you?
“The National Federation of the Blind of Connecticut believes blindness is merely an inconvenience and, with proper skills and training, a blind individual can obtain success in his or her personal and professional life.” http://www.nfbct.org/html/learn.htm
Small Group Discussion Questions • Does everyone have a culture? • Can you belong to more than one culture? • How does culture differ from ethnicity? • From community? • Society?
More Questions (Whole Group) • Is disability a culture? When yes, when no? Why? Why not? • How do the words that we use to describe the group in power and those that are not reveal hidden assumptions?
Follow up small group activity: • What were the most important ideas you took away from the readings as a whole and from the previous interactive presentation.
Main points: • There is no one right way of thinking about disability. • Definitions of disability (who is disabled, what particular behaviors indicate the presence of a disability, what skill limitations constitute a disability) are dependent on the values and beliefs of a particular group at a particular place and time.
Main points, cont. • Even if there is agreement as to whether an individual has a limitation of a particular kind, there may not be agreement across societies as to whether that limitation constitutes a disability or not. • Our assumptions about the “obviousness” of a particular kind of “disability” are a product of our upbringing, not necessarily a “fact.”
Looking ahead… Topic: Theoretical frameworks -- overview Read: Rosenblum& Travis (2006) and Jones (1996) Note: These are VERY heavy duty readings – you will need to start on them no later than by the weekend.