EDUC 144: Re(positioning) Disability: Historical, Cultural, and Social Lenses (AFRICAAM 244, CSRE 143, PEDS 246D)
This course is designed to introduce undergraduate students of any major to important theoretical and practical concepts regarding special education, disability, and diversity. This course primarily addresses the social construction of disability and its intersection with race and class through the critical examination of history, law, social media, film, and other texts. Students will engage in reflection about their own as well as broader U.S. discourses moving towards deeper understanding of necessary societal and educational changes to address inequities. Successful completion of this course fulfills one requirement for the School of Education minor in Education.
Last offered: Autumn 2021
EDUC 144A: Diverse Perspectives on Disability
The experiences of people with disabilities are often clouded by misconceptions, mystery, fear, and lack of personal experience. Although no one person has the keys to unlocking the diverse perspectives of people with disabilities, using tools afforded by narrative inquiry can help unlock opportunities for understanding as well as shifting conceptualizations in a world designed with little regard for the margins. We hope that this course will deepen our understanding of how disability intersects with a variety of identities that can mask or foreground forms of difference. Come learn with us as we engage with ourselves and the Stanford community around constructions of disability and the diverse perspectives that inform these complex constructions. Successful complete of this course fulfills one elective requirement for the Education Minor.
Last offered: Spring 2022
EDUC 144B: Biosocial-Biocultural Perspectives on Disability in Education (PEDS 144)
Disability is a complex phenomenon contested along biopolitical and sociopolitical vectors in the field of education and other attendant fields such as humanities, history, and biosciences. These contestations influence the ways in which disabled lives are supported and understood in schools and other public institutions. Students will be able to critically evaluate the biosocial and biopolitical, and sociopolitical nature of disability and attendant intersectionality's in relation to education systems and build strong repertoires of transdisciplinary knowledge that can be applied in their fields of interest.
Terms: Spr
| Units: 1-3
Instructors:
Handy, T. (PI)
;
Bunderson, M. (TA)
Filter Results: