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    What do we mean by culture when we speak of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy (CRP)? Appropriately grounded in her own community, Gloria Ladson-Billings (“But That’s Just Good Teaching: The Case for Culturally Relevant Pedagogy”) conducted her landmark research in majority African-American schools. Certainly race, ethnicity, and gender have long driven promotion and support for culturally responsive teaching. Today, given our own agency’s nearly 50 years of work in Special Education, we at Emerging America urge application of CRP with the large number of students with disabilities. Students with disabilities belong to many communities–by geography, interest and activities–the same as any students. Yet it is worth asking how students with disabilities can benefit from exploring the history and culture of people with disabilities. How might these students gain from having the choice to act in solidarity with diverse cultures of other people with disabilities? 

    In his 1977 speech celebrating successful advocacy for regulations to enforce Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, San Francisco activist and wheelchair user Ed Roberts declared: “Whenever we have brought ourselves together, whenever we have joined various disabilities together, we find our strength.” Roberts called not just for political change, but for outreach to “raise the consciousness of our fellow Americans with disabilities, to help them come out from the back wards, from the institutions, from the garbage heaps of our society.” Building on the successes of the 504 advocates and other struggles, this cross-disability movement united for the first time in human history to win broad bi-partisan passage of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. 

    Protests and advocacy by disability rights groups have won political influence and created communities of mutual support, from the 1988 “Deaf President Now” protests at Gallaudet University to the mobility rights movement and Autistic Self Advocacy Network. 

    How empowering it can be to engage students with disabilities in investigating this history! How vital for them to consider their own relationship to communities of people with particular disabilities or the larger cross-disability movement. How effective a means to build success as they research and devise solutions to the needs of people with disabilities in their own schools and towns. 

    Emerging America invites you to use our free Accessing Inquiry clearinghouse of resources on teaching students with disabilities. You might start with “Disability History through Primary Sources.” You will find teacher-created lesson plans, timelines and narratives of Disability History, as well as links to primary sources at the Library of Congress, Disability History Museum, and more. From there, work through the site to explore a wealth of effective strategies to challenge students with disabilities to succeed academically, to deepen their cultural competence, and to become civically engaged in their community. 

    Find an excellent video-based intro to CRP at Inquiry in the Upper Midwest, a TPS project of the Minnesota Historical Society. 

    Originally posted in the Culturally Relevant Pedagogy group in October, 2019. Trace the earlier discussion and add your thoughts below. 

      Pre K - 2    6 - 8    3 - 5    9 - 12    English/Language Arts    Social Studies/History    Special Education    Inclusion    Accessibility  

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    I was following a train of thought today in preparation for my TPS Teachers Network poster session for NCHE in March. My process began with revisiting the photo of deaf children singing the Star Spangled Banner at St. Rita's School in the early 1900s that   Cheryl Best  had added to an album titled What's Your Library of Congress Primary Source of the Year? Why was it her favorite? For the sheer joy it brought!

    That photo led me to a deeper exploration of the amazing Disability History Through Primary Sources website from Emerging America in search of more materials specifically on the education of the deaf. I was not disappointed. That site just keeps growing and changing with the times, especially with the new state standards that have finally gotten a foothold in K-12 education in several states. Kudos to all involved!

    If anyone reading this comment works with deaf education or if you simply want to know more, I would point you to a 2022 webcast from Prints & Photographs staff - Finding Pictures: Deaf History Month. It has some excellent photos in it. It will also help deaf students conduct Library of Congress research for National History Day, school history projects, and personal learning. 

      deaf education  

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