Dear Dr. Burke,
Thank you for sharing the recent readings and thoughts concerning the
cultural layers be it the big C or the little c as well to examine these
themes within language, behavioral, ability and human spaces. Although not
from a scholarly lens per say, this conference to why multiple voices need
to be heard in the "whole child" sphere of advocacy (e.g. the conference
topics-
(Broken Promises/Leaving You All Alone/Why We Are Special):
https://funnels.autisminblack.org/2024-the-aib-conference-registration?ut...
https://youtu.be/lUv77d0estc?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/KAHQUjjlu44?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/OEDhfj71L-Q?feature=shared
Voices of all types are everywhere...we have to take the time to connect to
them all.
On Mon, Mar 4, 2024 at 11:10 AM Burke, Mack <Mack_Burke(a)baylor.edu> wrote:
This is an interesting one recommended by Jason Travers from Temple
University along with one on Culture, Race, and Autism that is pretty good
(he should be at the BK conference and will introduce those who go- smart
guy). For those of you
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This is an interesting one recommended by Jason Travers from Temple
University along with one on Culture, Race, and Autism that is pretty good
(he should be at the BK conference and will introduce those who go- smart
guy). For those of you outside disability- there is a firestorm around the
disproportionality issue and disability. With one camp, much of which is
driven by critical theory- saying that special education is ableist and
racist and the other camp saying some groups are going to need additional
special education services over others that to deny services to those with
disabilities is itself ableist and racist. Ablest being the new corollary
term for racist- so you can imagine how nasty the conversation can become…
One of the problems though it seems to me with the disproportionality
research is that it isn’t really clear what proportionality means? Texas
put a cap on the number of students served a few years ago (I think it was
8% or something like that) in sped in part to address issues of
disproportionality- and got in trouble with the feds over it.
Mostly it is the aggregate people seems to be talking about it seems in
general- but does that mean all the comparisons at the local level should
be proportional as well? And if so- in which areas of the US and which
disabilities? Or urban areas vs. rural areas just for an example- my guess
maybe over represented in urban areas and under in rural areas? Can
disaggregate and slice and dice a lot of different ways- not just based on
race (if race exists which seems debatable and then one can reliably
separate cultural characteristics and stereotypes :) Have to go slow and
measured on the culture stuff…thorny stuff- is why I like having all of you
around to help me figure it all out 😊
MDB
*“Cultural variations in the representation of autism and*
*service preferences also have been discussed as potential*
*contributors to disproportionality, although these factors*
*often fall outside the scope of the studies.”*
Mack D. Burke, Ph.D.
Department of Educational Psychology
Applied Behavior Analysis and Special Education Programs
Behavioral Education & Assessment Research (BEAR Lab)
School of Education, Baylor University
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