Identifying First Nations students with invisible disabilities

Countless studies have employed the term disabilities as an all-encompassing umbrella for both visible and invisible disabilities. Scholars and practitioners have relied on medical criteria and corresponding diagnostic tools as the standard for verification of all disabilities. However, invisible di...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schall, Gina
Other Authors: Freeze, Rick (Education), Enns, Charlotte (Education) Shore, Fred (Native Studies) McIntyre, Laureen (University of Saskatchewan)
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/32597
Description
Summary:Countless studies have employed the term disabilities as an all-encompassing umbrella for both visible and invisible disabilities. Scholars and practitioners have relied on medical criteria and corresponding diagnostic tools as the standard for verification of all disabilities. However, invisible disabilities are difficult to identify, not only because they are not obvious, but also because they represent a wide range of characteristics, fall along continuums of severity for certain disabilities, and lack the verification criteria and diagnostic tools available for visible disabilities. In addition, difficulties and obstacles for students with invisible disabilities are experienced daily in the educational environments of First Nations schools, and little is known about these students and their experiences. Are teachers working in First Nations schools able to identify students with invisible disabilities? Are the teachers cognizant of invisible disabilities? Do the teachers understand the impacts of invisible disabilities on students’ identity, learning and socialization? This study focused on establishing a baseline of teachers’ knowledge of invisible disabilities. One goal was to develop a protocol for identifying First Nations students with invisible disabilities. Teacher questionnaires and resource teacher interviews were employed to gather data. As this study explored a new area, great care was taken to record all aspects of the research with the hope that other researchers will further explore the connection between identification of First Nations students with invisible disabilities and appropriate educational programming for them. This study’s findings exposed the presence of a vast gap in teachers’ understandings of exactly what invisible disabilities encompass. Something as seemingly simple as consensus on the categorization of disabilities as visible or invisible, by the teachers in this study, was absent. Other areas connected to identifying invisible disabilities were equally blurred. Many avenues ...