Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities

Disability is a social force that arguably creates more education problems for students with disabilities than their impairments. Understanding it as a form of social oppression can lead to less exclusionary teaching and learning attitudes, beliefs, expectations and practices. Numerous studies have...

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Main Author: Sandra Makwembere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2021-09-01
Series:Research in Social Sciences and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/567
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spelling doaj-6875b8ef430a4f13a328d653151d8c402021-09-20T03:51:56ZengOpenED NetworkResearch in Social Sciences and Technology2468-68912021-09-016210.46303/ressat.2021.11Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing OpportunitiesSandra Makwembere0Walter Sisulu University Disability is a social force that arguably creates more education problems for students with disabilities than their impairments. Understanding it as a form of social oppression can lead to less exclusionary teaching and learning attitudes, beliefs, expectations and practices. Numerous studies have looked at the experiences of staff and students with disabilities as well as the experiences of teaching students with disabilities. However, more studies are needed to better understand and address disability in higher education. Nondisabled perspectives have a role to play in opposing disabling educational practices and cultures to make higher education more inclusive. Many opportunities especially exist for nondisabled lecturers to contribute to addressing the higher education barriers and discrimination which often affect students with disabilities. The purpose of this study was to use a disability perspective to present my lecturing practices during the move to emergency remote teaching and learning in response to COVID-19 while working at an HDI. An autoethnographic method was used. Content analysis of my accounts exposed the exclusionary nature of my practices in terms of how they facilitated ableism and suppressed disability discourse. Recommendations are made, in light of the results, on ways to not only make higher education spaces more accommodating but counter a wider societal culture that oppresses and even seeks to eradicate the value of those who live with impairments.  https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/567Ableismdisabilityeducation accesshigher educationinclusive higher education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra Makwembere
spellingShingle Sandra Makwembere
Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
Research in Social Sciences and Technology
Ableism
disability
education access
higher education
inclusive higher education
author_facet Sandra Makwembere
author_sort Sandra Makwembere
title Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
title_short Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
title_full Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
title_fullStr Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
title_full_unstemmed Disability Sensitivity and Sensibility: A Nondisabled Lecturer Perspective on Inclusive Lecturing Opportunities
title_sort disability sensitivity and sensibility: a nondisabled lecturer perspective on inclusive lecturing opportunities
publisher OpenED Network
series Research in Social Sciences and Technology
issn 2468-6891
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Disability is a social force that arguably creates more education problems for students with disabilities than their impairments. Understanding it as a form of social oppression can lead to less exclusionary teaching and learning attitudes, beliefs, expectations and practices. Numerous studies have looked at the experiences of staff and students with disabilities as well as the experiences of teaching students with disabilities. However, more studies are needed to better understand and address disability in higher education. Nondisabled perspectives have a role to play in opposing disabling educational practices and cultures to make higher education more inclusive. Many opportunities especially exist for nondisabled lecturers to contribute to addressing the higher education barriers and discrimination which often affect students with disabilities. The purpose of this study was to use a disability perspective to present my lecturing practices during the move to emergency remote teaching and learning in response to COVID-19 while working at an HDI. An autoethnographic method was used. Content analysis of my accounts exposed the exclusionary nature of my practices in terms of how they facilitated ableism and suppressed disability discourse. Recommendations are made, in light of the results, on ways to not only make higher education spaces more accommodating but counter a wider societal culture that oppresses and even seeks to eradicate the value of those who live with impairments. 
topic Ableism
disability
education access
higher education
inclusive higher education
url https://ressat.org/index.php/ressat/article/view/567
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