
Growing Up with Disability
$75.42
- Paperback
224 pages
- Release Date
14 July 1998
Summary
Growing Up with Disability: Voices of Young People
Encompassing a wide range of perspectives on childhood impairment and its social implications, this text adopts a child-centred approach, including interviews with disabled young people and their own writing, to enable their voices to be heard.
Pre-school and school age children describe their behaviour and feelings within their own families, substitute families, and residential homes. The book explores how such children can…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781853025686 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1853025682 |
| Series: | Research Highlights in Social Work |
| Author: | Carol Robinson, Kirsten Stalker |
| Publisher: | Jessica Kingsley Publishers |
| Imprint: | Jessica Kingsley Publishers |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 224 |
| Edition: | 1st |
| Release Date: | 14 July 1998 |
| Weight: | 318g |
| Dimensions: | 234mm x 155mm x 10mm |
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Critics Review
This book is essentially written for social workers form a sociological perspective. It is openly critical of the medical model and of psychological models of childhood, arguing that these pathologies individuals and deny the experience of the child with disability as belonging to a social group, whose experiences are structured by wider policies and practices. Therefore, at times, it makes for uncomfortable, but challenging reading. The book is extremely child-centred: the experiences of disabled children are central and the text is brought to life by the many personal accounts of living with a disability. – European Child and Adult PsychiatryThis is a book that will stay in the mind for a long time. There are individual chapters which stand out as clear and succinct, well researched and referenced. There are other chapters which stand out because they contain the direct words of young people growing up with disability, which summarise just as succinctly the issues covered elsewhere by the academic writers…I would suggest it should be on the essential reading list of any training course for professionals likely to work with disabled young people. The book is highly original in bringing together in one volume the voices of young people themselves and academic summaries of what is known about young disabled people growing up. It is comprehensive in scope, touching on a range of conditions, living circumstances and social background of young people. Treat yourself to a copy. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual DisabilitiesIt covers a wide range of topics, from education, health, and leisure to child protection, adoption and fostering, and would be equally useful for those have daily or only occasional contact with disabled children. I enjoyed reading this book, but what makes it stand out for me is the way the principles of equality, inclusion and autonomy are incorporated, along with the views of disabled children. I would especially recommend it as a core text for students in social work, medical nursing and related areas. – Adoption & FosteringGrowing Up With Disability contains 13 articles encompassing a wide range of perspectives and issues on childhood impairment and its social implications. This book is soundly written from the perspective of the social model of disability by people who have an impairment. Whereas other books and articles have written from the perspective of the social model of disability by people who have an impairment. Whereas other books and articles have written about the way parents experience life with a disabled child, accounts of children’s lives and experiences are presented in this book. This is not a book that will provide therapists with lots of practical suggestions to incorporate into their interventions. However, it is a book that should be read by paediatric occupational therapists who are committed to using a client-centred and/or family-centred approach when working with children. It will inform the therapist of relevant issues to consider and as such provide the therapist with greater insight and understanding. This should, as a consequence assist a therapist to build a stronger therapeutic relationship and to tailor his or her interventions more effectively to meet the real needs of the child. – British Journal of Occupational TherapyThis book provides a comprehensive and innovative contribution to the literature in this area. It embraces all aspects of growing up with a disability, and succinctly examines the complexities and realities of life as a disabled child. Each chapter is clear and concise, and takes the reader step by step through the varying stages of growing up with a disability from a child-centred approach. Chapters four, six, eight and nine would provide particularly helpful discussions of the salient issues relating to children with disabilities. Overall, this material would serve as a useful resource for researchers, students and academics. Additionally, this text would be an excellent handbook for policy makers and practitioners working with disabled children and their families. – Child Care in Practice
About The Author
Carol Robinson
Dr. Kirsten Stalker is a Reader in the Education Faculty at Strathclyde University. She is the editor of Developments in Short-Term Care: Breaks and Opportunities, and author of ‘Share the Care’: An Evaluation of a Family-Based Respite Care Service, both published by Jessica Kingsley.
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