Table of Contents
Section I: From the Culture of Disability-to-Disability Culture
Chapter 1: Historical and Modern Contexts of Culture and the Impact on Belonging
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Culture
A Modern View of Culture
Cultural Expressions in Schools
Cultural Expressions in Schools
References
Chapter 2: Intersectionality in the Context of Disability
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
The Impact of Intersectional Sociocultural Identities
Intersectional Competence in Special Education
Summary
References
Chapter 3: Disability Culture in the Deaf and Autistic Communities
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Disability as a Sociocultural Identity
Disability Culture in Educational Contexts
Inequities in Education
Summary
References
Section II: Critical Theories that Influence our Views of Disability and Race
Chapter 4: Critical Race Theory: The Dos, the Don’ts, the Already Dones, & the Stop Doings
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
The History of CRT
The Do’s: What is CRT?
The Don’ts: What CRT is Not
The Already Dones: Critical Race Theory in Education
Summary
References
Chapter 5: The Journey of Disability Studies: Contemplating Disability Critically
Author Biographies
Abstract
Disability Studies
Discovering the Need for Critical Disability Studies
Seeking Racial Justice
Looking Forward
Summary
References
Chapter 6: The History of Disability, Disability Models, and a View for the Future: The Past is Prologue
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Introduction to the History of Disability Rights in the United States
Models of Disability
The Language of Disability
Disability in the Media
Models of Disability in Education
Summary
References
Section III: Educational Frameworks that Champion Equity
Chapter 7: Intersectional Sociocultural Competency and Educational Equity
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Equity
Summary
References
Chapter 8: Culturally and Linguistically Sustaining Practices: The What, the Why, and the How
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
What and Why Culturally and Linguistically Sustaining Pedagogy?
Embedding Practices into Special Education Teaching Frameworks
From Culturally and Linguistically Sustaining Practices to Socioculturally Sustaining Practices
Summary
References
Chapter 9: Educational Practices to Acknowledge and Incorporate Students’ Sociocultural Identities and Experiences
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Special Education
Now What: Remixed Education
Summary
References
Section IV: Social and Cultural Rights Movements that Impact Special Education
Chapter 10: Disability Rights: The Impact of Social and Cultural Movements on Special Education
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Ableism
Social and Cultural Rights Movements in the 20th Century
Disability as a Cultural Phenomenon
Effective Interventions for Increasing a Sense of Belonging
Summary
References
Chapter 11: The Push and Pull of the Litigation-Legislation-Litigation Cycle
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
United States Special Education Law
Impact of Activism on Language
Inclusion and Least Restrictive Environment (LRE)
Disproportionality
Educational Frameworks
Summary
References
Chapter 12: Intersectional Belonging in Special Education
Author Biographies
Abstract
Guiding Questions
Factors that Impact Special Education
Special Education’s Impact
Creating a Sense of Belonging
Summary
References
Editor Biographies
Glossary