Publication | Closed Access
The Cultural Work of Learning Disabilities
191
Citations
11
References
2006
Year
EthnicityMulticultural EducationCultural WorkDisabilityDiscriminationEducationUnited StatesDevelopmental DisabilitiesSocial SciencesRaceExceptional ChildrenRaciolinguisticsInclusive EducationCultural DiversityAfrican American StudiesMinority-group StatusRacial GroupEthnic StudiesMinority StudiesSpecific Learning DisorderIntersectionalityAccessible EducationEthnic IdentityCultural SensitivityIntercultural EducationCultureCross-cultural AssessmentSpecial EducationSupposed Mental Abilities
Culturally and educationally, the United States specializes in the production of kinds of persons described first by ethnic, racial, and linguistic lines and second by supposed mental abilities. Overlaps between the two systems of classification are frequent, systematically haphazard, and often deleterious. An examination of classrooms around the country shows shifting currents of concern and tension that invite the attribution of labels for mental and/or minority-group status. This article introduces a language for a cultural analysis—a language of people interpreting the interpretations of others—and pursues an example from a classroom where both the good sense and the dangers of categories for learning-disabled and minority-group status are on display.
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