Disability

Cards (28)

  • Which sociologists argue that disabled identites are changing / not negative ?
    • Onkle & Kim (self negating)
    • Antle (oblivious)
    • Murugami (accept & independent from identity)
    • Shakespeare (media)
  • People in Onkle & Kims research felt positive about their disabilities although they knew other negatively evaluated disabilities
  • What did Antle find when researching disabled children's identities?
    Disabled children saw themselves the same way children without disabilities see themselves
  • Who found that disabled children see themselves the same way children without disabilities view themselves?
    Antle
  • Which sociologist found that disabled people were positive about their disabilities although they knew others negatively evaluated them?
    Onkle & Kim
  • Who found that disabled people can accept their impairment and be independent from it?
    Murugami
  • Why does Shakespeare belief that disabled identities have changed and are not negative?
    because of the increased visibility of disabled people in the media
  • Match the sociologist to the theory
    A) Antle
    B) Onkle & Kim
    C) Murugami
    D) Shakespeare
  • Which sociologist argued that disabled identities were significant and negative?
    • Goffman (master status)
    • Gill (self fulfilling prophecy)
    • Zola (discriminatory language)
    • Galvin (sense of self is challenged)
    • Longmore (media negatively shows them)
    • Shakespeare (victim mentality)
    • Learnt Helplessness
    • Best (social model)
  • Which sociologist said that disabled identities are negatively labeled which creates a “master status”?
    Goffman
  • Gill stated that people who become disabled later on in life find it harder to not self fulfill the label they placed on other disabled people
  • Who stated that people who become disabled later on in life find it harder to not self fulfill the label they placed on other disabled people?
    Gill
  • Which sociologist said :
    “the very vocabulary we use to describe our selves is borrowed from discriminatory able-bodied society. We are de-formed, dis-eased, dis-abled, dis-ordered, ab-normal and most telling of all called an in-valid."?
    Zola
  • Who pointed out that the language used to describe disabled people was discriminatory — the power of language (effects disabled people)?
    Zola
  • Zola said that what negatively impacted disabled people?
    Language
  • Who stated that when a person becomes disabled later on in life there sense of self is challenged and there is a huge transition?
    Galvin
  • Galvin thought that becoming disabled was a huge transition and challenged what?
    a persons sense of self
  • Which sociologist found that the media presented people with disabilities as either evil, inhuman, dependent or as objects of pity / charity?
    Longmore
  • Who said that the media presented people with disabilities as evil, inhuman, dependent or as objects of pity / charity:
    A) Longmore
  • Which model of disability is in this picture
    A) Social
  • Which model of disability is in the picture
    A) Medical
  • Which sociologist said that:
    “society generates forms of discrimination and exclusion that disabled people have to cope with. The problem is to be found in the social constructs of prejudice that surround disability and not in the bodies of disabled people"?
    Best
  • Who said that society disables physically impaired people because the disabled are excluded from being able to fully participate in society because of stereotypical attitudes from able bodied people?
    Oliver
  • Who said that disabled people are socialised into seeing themselves as victims and they may use their disability as an “excuse” for their own failures. Creating a “victim mentality”?
    Shakespeare
  • Shakespeare uses what phrase to describe disabled peoples self fulfilling prophecy?
    victim mentality
  • Why might a disabled person not try to get a job or study hard for school?
    Learnt Helplessness
  • What phrase refers to disabled people accepting the idea that they are incapable of changing their situation and as a result they may fail to take actions which could help them?
    Learnt helplessness
  • Match the sociologists to the theory:
    A) Goffman
    B) Gill
    C) Zola
    D) Galvin
    E) Longmore