by Clare Connors and Kirsten Stalker (Author)
Drawing on one-to-one guided conversations with disabled children and follow-up interviews with their parents and siblings, this volume takes an in-depth look at the effects of disability on disabled children. Approaching this neglected subject through the disabled child's perspective, it considers:
* disabled children's understanding of disability
* the ways in which children negotiate the experience of disability in their everyday lives
* children's perceptions of their relationships with professionals and their knowledge and views of service provision
* children's aspirations for the future and their views on the type of support which might help achieve them
* siblings' perceptions of the effects on them of having a disabled brother or sister.
Informed by the social model of disability, Clare Connors and Kirsten Stalker identify and draw out the implications of their findings for social work and health services. Illustrating effective ways of communicating directly with disabled children, this will prove an invaluable resource for academics, policy makers and practitioners working with disabled children in health and social care settings.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 188
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Jessica Kingsley
Published: 06 Dec 2002
ISBN 10: 1843101270
ISBN 13: 9781843101277
Book Overview: An in-depth look at the effects of disability on disabled children from the child's perspective
Drawing on in-depth interviews with disabled children, their parents, and siblings, this well-written book explores disabled children's understandings of disability, how they negotiate disability in their day-to day lives, including their experience of professionals and services, as well as exploring their relationships with their siblings.
The bulk of the book is concerned with the practice by children with impairments of negotiating disability whether at home or at school and how it is mediated by the key relationships with parents, siblings, and professionals.
In drawing out implications for health and social work services the authors concentrate on health and education, the result of the low level involvement with social services of the majority of families participating in the study. Indeed those comments relating directly to social work come from parents rather than children and were largely negative, in contrast to generally affirmative views presented by children in relation to other (medical and educational) professionals. However, this does not limit the significance of the findings of this research for social work practitioners and educators. The emphasis placed on external-and particularly psycho-emotional-barriers, rather than on the practicalities of managing impairment, coupled with the growing development of good practice around seeking and acting upon disabled children's preferences and aspirations have real implications, not least in relation to resources, for how we engage with disabled children and their families in both practice and research.
-- British Journal of Social Work