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Towards a vital pedagogy: Learning from anti-ableist practice in art education

March 31st, 2020
Claire Penketh
Challenging ableism by integrating crip theory for inclusive and transformative art education
International Journal of Education Through Art
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1386/eta_00014_1
Posted byLuciana Ramos

Abstract/Description

Art education has the potential to promote inclusive education for all children and young people. However, the pervasive discourse of special education, with an emphasis on individual deficit, support and remediation, can dominate our thinking about the relationship between disability and art education. This article reports on an attempt to resist the limitations of such discourses by introducing anti-ableist, crip theory to art educators (n=48). Visual and textual storyboards enabled practitioners to present, reflect and revise projects from a committed anti-ableist position. Modified projects reflected an awareness of the benefits of multi-sensory approaches, the advantages of interdependency and a greater resonance with contemporary arts practice. Acknowledging the challenges of taking theory to practice, the article suggests that anti-ableist theory can promote a vital pedagogy in art education. It concludes that crip theory can provoke practice-based resistance to deficit-based models of disability.

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