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Miniature of Written in the Body: Embodiments of Gender, Asexuality, Queerness, and Disability
Written in the Body: Embodiments of Gender, Asexuality, Queerness, and Disability
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      Date: 2023-01-01

      Creator: Corey Schmolka

      Access: Access restricted to the Bowdoin Community



        “I’m Going to Help You Become a Better You”: Teacher-Student Dynamics in Special Education

        Date: 2019-05-01

        Creator: Sophie Sadovnikoff

        Access: Open access

        This study explores teachers’ roles in special education in terms of how they interact with students with disabilities. In the struggle against oppression and disempowerment, teachers can play a crucial role in employing education as the great equalizer, or else not. The question this research seeks to answer is: how do special education teachers interact with their students with disabilities, and how does this teacher role fit within a society that seeks to marginalize these students? I argue that special education teachers reproduce ableism by disciplining, normalizing, and controlling their students, but teachers express a deep sense of caring for and about their students, and understand their work as being their best effort at helping their students. The ableist actions that they perform are, ironically, an effort to help their students create fulfilling lives within an ableist society.