NYT Contributors’ Letter
Open Society
Prison by Any Other Name | The New Press
Electronic monitoring. Locked-down drug treatment centers. House arrest. Mandated psychiatric treatment. Data driven surveillance. Extended probation. These are some of the key alternatives held up as cost effective substitutes for jails and prisons. But in a searing, “cogent critique” (Library Journal), Maya Schenwar and Victoria Law reveal that many of these so-called reforms actually weave in new strands of punishment and control, bringing new populations who would not otherwise have been subject to imprisonment under physical control by the state.
Pedagogical Progressivism and Black Education: A Historiographical Review, 1880–1957 - Michael Hines, Thomas Fallace, 2022
This article offers a critical review of the literature on how race played into the historical development of pedagogical progressivism in the late-19th and ear...
Left-Handedness and Neurodiversity: A Surprising Link | Psychology Today
Scientific studies reveal a link between neurodiversity and left-handedness.
The use of language in autism research
The past three decades have seen a major shift in our understanding of the strong links between autism and identity. These developments have called fo…
[PDF] The use of language in autism research | Semantic Scholar
Semantic Scholar extracted view of "The use of language in autism research" by Ruth Monk et al.
The use of language in autism research - PubMed
The past three decades have seen a major shift in our understanding of the strong links between autism and identity. These developments have called for careful consideration of the language used to describe autism. Here, we briefly discuss some of these deliberations and provide guidance to research …
Charis Hill | they/them on Twitter
“A disabled person's right to access public spaces isn't a special need.
A disabled person's diet isn't a special need.
A disabled person's right to information & communication isn't a special need.
A disabled person's accommodation isn't a special need.”
Against Cop Shit
Thesis: abolish cop shit in the classroom.
The benefits of 'body doubling' when you have ADHD, according to experts | CNN
'Body doubling' is a strategy people with ADHD can use to accomplish more than they would alone. Here's how to do it.
Visible Learning - Matching teaching to style of learning Details
Science / Fiction — Carol Black
‘Evidence-based’ education, scientific racism, and how learning styles became a myth
Adults newly diagnosed as autistic quickly learn a key lesson about how they fit into society
Learning you're autistic as an adult can be fraught with challenges, but these people are determined to embrace their autistic identity.
Supporting pupils through Autistic Burnout (Teacher Guide)
This article discusses what Autistic Burnout may look like & how you can support young people & their families within educational settings.
Prevalence and treatment of mental, behavioral, and developmental disorders in children with co‐occurring autism spectrum disorder and attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder: A population‐based study
This study examines mental, behavioral, and developmental disorders (MBDDs) and associated treatment for children with co-occurring autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity ...
(PDF) John Dewey, New Education, and Social Control in the Classroom
PDF | Author Details: Jeroen Staring-Dr Jeroen Staring teaches mathematics at secondary schools in The Netherlands. His 2005 Medical Sciences... | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
Historicizing Jim Sinclair’s “Don’t Mourn for Us”: A Cultural and Intellectual History of Neurodiversity’s First Manifesto
Jim Sinclair’s 1993 essay “Don’t Mourn for Us” has influenced the neurodiversity movement since its publication. Sinclair’s essay stands out as particularly radical when considered within the context of other autistic writings from the...
How prioritizing acceptance enables young people to learn in community
Schools often demand students conform to their structures, rather than asking what learners need.
Opinion | There Is No Dignity in This Kind of America
The relentless attack on trans people Is an attack on us all.
Opinion | There Is No Dignity in This Kind of America
The relentless attack on trans people Is an attack on us all.
#CultOfCompliance: Disabled/Deaf People Killed for Non-Compliance and Disability Erasure – This is David M. Perry
Transing: Resistance to Eugenic Ideology in Nella Larsen's Passing on JSTOR
Project MUSE - Transing: Resistance to Eugenic Ideology in Nella Larsen’s iPassing/i
Context, Challenge and Catharsis
A long time ago I proposed in this column a thing that I’m still determined to turn into an actual Thing: that the ways in which video games are appealing to users can be broken down into three categories: Context (by which I mean story), Challenge (by which I mean challenge) and Gratification (by which I mean everything that is fun on an immediate, primitive level with no apparent involvement from the other two). The milking-stool model. A good game should endeavor to make use of all three legs, but a particularly strong showing in some legs can make up […]
How Educators Secretly Remove Students With Disabilities From School
Known as informal removals, the tactics are “off-the-book” suspensions often in violation of federal civil rights protections for those with disabilities.
Alcohol: An Autistic Masking Tool?
Drinking can help mask autism, but stereotypes about autistic innocence often keep autistic drinkers from accessing support.
Unbelonging
Where do those relegated to the margins find belonging?In her luminous debut Unbelonging, Gayatri Sethi deftly interweaves verse, memoir, and a bold call to action as she recounts her experience se…
The Economic Response to the Pandemic Proved We Can Have Nice Things
Biden is ending the Covid public health emergency, and with it will go some of the positive outcomes of the terrible pandemic.
Crip News v.68
Police terror, the coming end of the COVID Public Health Emergency, new works, calls, events, and more.
The verbs that awareness/history/acceptance months produce - we “honor,” we “highlight, we “reflect on” - seem vague and empty compared to the material, bodily harm that ableism creates. The time of life is being stolen from BIPOC disabled people under the cover of our complacency.
Autism Research—What’s New in January 2023? — Neurodiverse Connection
In these monthly research roundups by Ann Memmott PgC MA, we take a look at some of the latest autism research being reported through Journals.