Full metadata
Title
Re-framing the master narratives of dis/ability through an emotion lens: voices of Latina/o students with learning disabilities
Reframing the master narratives of dis/ability through an emotion lens
Description
This study re-frames learning disabilities (LD) through the emotion-laden talk of four Latina/o students with LD. The research questions included: 1) What are the emotion-laden talk of Latina/o students about being labeled with LD? 2) What are Latina/o students' emotion-laden talk of the idea of LD? I identified master narratives, the "pre-existent sociocultural forms of interpretation. They are meant to delineate and confine the local interpretation strategies and agency constellations in individual subjects as well as in social institutions," (Bamberg, 2004, p. 287) within the following literatures to inform my research questions and conceptual framework: a) historiography and interdisciplinary literature on LD; b) policy (i.e., Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)), c) the academic and d) social and emotional dimensions of LD; and e) student voice research with students with LD. Interdisciplinary, critical ethnographic and qualitative research methods such as taking into account issues of power, etic and emic perspectives, in-depth interviewing, field notes were used. Total participants included: four students, three parents and three teachers. More specifically, descriptive coding, identification of emotion-laden talk, a thematic analysis, memoing and intersectional and cultural-historical developmental constructs were used to analyze students’ emotion-laden talk. Emotion-laden talk about being labeled with LD included the hegemony of smartness, disability microaggressions, on the trinity of LD: help + teachers + literacy troubles, on being bullied, embarrassment to ask for assistance from others and help as hope. The emotion-laden talk about the idea of LD included LD as double-edge sword, LDness as X, the meaning of LD as resource, trouble with information processing, speech, and silence, the salience of the intersection of disability, ethnicity and language and other markers of difference, struggles due to lack of understanding and LD myths. This study provides a discussion and implications for theory, research, policy, and practice.
Date Created
2016
Contributors
- Hernández-Saca, David Isaac (Author)
- Artiles, Alfredo J. (Thesis advisor)
- Connor, David J (Committee member)
- Prior, Matthew T. (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Special Education
- Disability Studies in Education
- Emotionality
- Intersectionality
- Latina/o Students
- Learning Disabilities
- Student Voice
- Hispanic American students--United States--Psychology.
- Hispanic American students
- Hispanic American students--Education--United States.
- Hispanic American students
- Learning disabled--United States--Psychology.
- Learning disabled
- Learning disabled--Education--United States.
- Learning disabled
Resource Type
Extent
xiii, 348 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.40185
Statement of Responsibility
by David Isaac Hernández-Saca
Description Source
Viewed on November 21, 2016
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2016
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-280)
Field of study: Curriculum and instruction
System Created
- 2016-10-12 02:15:19
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:21:55
- 3 years 2 months ago
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