ISR COVID-19 Blog

Page 51

edgehill.ac.uk/ISR

Returning to ‘normal’: Better or Worse for those with special need and/or disabilities? 29th May 2020 Michelle Dunne n uncertain times, it is unsurprising that evoking the idea of ‘normal’ provides a source of comfort. ‘Normal’ implies a predictability and coherence that many of us crave. Both a return to the ‘old’ normal and a re-imagining of a ‘new’ normal are presented as potential reassurances of a more familiar and comprehensible future. It seems that the word ‘normal’ is more present in our communications than ever before. However, our craving for normality is not without issues.

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I want to explore my own discomfort with the idolisation of normality, from the perspective of education. The school closure experiences and insights of children and young people who attract the term ‘special educational needs and/or disabilities’ (SEND) can offer some insight into our relationship with ideas about ‘normal’. The very fact that the term ‘SEND’ includes the word ‘special’ indicates an interesting relationship with normality. For example, disabled advocates have long campaigned for the use of remote meetings as a way to make education, workplaces, and social opportunities more accessible. Their need for these provisions has been deemed special, and thus extra or other.

If we consider Lennard Davis’ (2010) analysis of the construction of normalcy, which appears in history shortly after industrialisation and follows a eugenicist path, we see that ‘normal’ can be thought of as the idealisation of the statistically average, a notion tied closely to efficiency and economy. These statistical averages allow us to universally orient our practices toward the productivity of the statistically average human, and to measure ourselves in terms of deviations from that ‘ideal’. Our practices, then, might be considered to be a good fit for the extremely few people who fit in precisely the middle of all given measures. When we organise ourselves according to the average, variations are applied as extra or other.

Michelle Dunne is a Graduate Teaching Assistant in the Faculty of Education at Edge Hill University. References: Davis, L. J. (2010) ‘Constructing Normalcy: The Bell Curve, the Novel, and the Invention of the Disabled Body in the Nineteenth Century’, in Davis, L. J. (ed.) The Disability Studies Reader. New York: Routledge, pp. 3– 16.

The current yearning for normality provides an opportunity for the further idealisation of the normal. As schools reopen, will those practices which have become normal become special once again? I wonder what other barriers we could overcome if we were to deem difference as normal rather than special? If we orient ourselves toward a new version of normal that is accommodating only toward the average, are we reconstituting the same old disadvantages?

In our present situation, the use of remote meetings has become normal, and large numbers of people are educated, carry out their paid work, and engage in social activity online. Substantial efforts are made to ensure that all of this is possible. The change in the status of remote education – from special to normal – highlights significant issues in the way that we can equitably approach education, and the problematic nature of our yearning for normality.

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Returning to ‘normal’: Better or Worse for those with special need and/or disabilities?

2min
page 51

To the Moon and Back: Summing up the ISR/EHU Covid-19 Blog

10min
pages 53-56

Staging Apocalypse: Endgame, by Samuel Beckett

2min
page 52

Covid-19: Liberation from the Clock (for some

2min
page 50

Listen up! Schools have always been much more than places for Education

2min
page 49

Experts at Bereavement?

2min
page 48

Covid-19, Higher Education and the rise of video-based learning

2min
page 47

Streaming and CGI? The future of TV and Film after COVID-19?

2min
page 44

Can the new Labour Leadership Rise to the Challenge?

2min
page 46

Creative Resilience and going OFFLine during Lockdown

2min
page 45

Covid-19: Hollywood’s Next 9/11?

2min
page 43

Towards a ‘Next Normal’: HE and Reflection at Speed

2min
page 42

Epidemics: A View from Italy

2min
page 41

Covid-19: An Opportunity for Nature and Outdoor Education

2min
page 40

Emerging from Lockdown: Shared Experience as we (re)commune together

2min
page 39

How to Stay ‘Engaged’ at a Distance: Youth Work and COVID-19

2min
page 35

Everyday Creativity: Why the Arts need to Rethink What Matters

2min
page 38

Coming Out” and Covid-19

2min
page 36

Flattening the Acceptance Curve: Transitioning a more Inclusive World after COVID-19

2min
page 34

Pandemics, Prohibition and the Past: COVID-19 in Historical Perspective

2min
page 33

We Make the Road by Walking: A ‘Kinder’ Society after COVID-19?

2min
page 37

Constructing a ‘New Normal’: What Changes when it’s all over?

2min
page 32

The Road to Nowhere? Tourism after Covid-19

3min
page 31

COVID-19 and Child Abuse in Institutions

2min
page 30

Citizen Science to tackle Poor Air Quality post COVID-19

3min
page 29

Images in the Head; the Pervasiveness of Dreaming in Isolation

3min
page 28

Dig where you stand: Histories of where you live in a Global Pandemic

2min
page 27

Blitzed by Myths: The ‘Spirit’ of the Blitz and COVID-19

3min
page 26

New Realities? New Culture? What next for HR post Covid-19?

2min
page 25

Temporary or Fixed? Changing Business Models in a Global Pandemic

2min
page 24

An Outcome of the Coronavirus Outbreak

2min
page 23

Re-imagining a ‘Good Society’ in the wake of COVID-19

2min
page 22

Lockdown and Educational Inequality: Some Reflections

2min
page 21

Coronavirus and Calais refugees: How can you stay safe without soap?

2min
page 20

Wither Fake News: COVID-19 and its Impact on Journalism

2min
page 19

COVID-19: Lockdown when you are Locked Up

2min
page 17

Ministry without the Ministered: Reflections from a Vicar in Lockdown

2min
page 16

In Troubled Times, Philosophy CAN Help

2min
page 18

COVID-19 & the (dis)proportionate case for lockdown

3min
page 14

Who Needs Society? Authoritarianism and COVID-19

2min
page 15

What future for the politician’s ‘Direct Address’?

4min
page 12

COVID-19 lockdown: What are the implications for individual freedom?

2min
page 13

Fingerprints, DNA and Policing Powers during COVID-19

3min
page 9

What is the new ‘normal’? Autism, Routine and Covid-19

3min
page 11

Lockdown 2020 – The Impact on Social Care

1min
page 8

Hannah Arendt: A Theorist for Troubled Times

2min
page 10

Back in the USSR: C-19 and the Normalising of a Surveillance State

2min
page 3

The Arts and COVID-19: A Time of Danger and Opportunity?

2min
page 7

Where is the Balance – Democracy in the Lockdown

4min
page 6

Is it kindness that matters?

7min
pages 4-5
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