| Disabilities in the Classroom
by Bettina Hoerlin
It was the next-to-last class of the semester after a whirlwind tour
of today’s major health issues and the systems meant to address
them. Firmly rooted in the tenets of public health, the course focuses
on problems disproportionately impacting inner-city populations made vulnerable
by poor health status and woefully inadequate access to care. It’s
called “Issues in Urban Public Health” and if it were graced
with a subtitle it might read as “Social Justice and Social Disparities
in Health.” In any case, by the course’s end, students are
keenly aware of the message.
With limited enrollment, the class is relatively small. A lottery determined
the 24 Haverford and Bryn Mawr students who filed slowly into class with
more than their usual tardiness. Had the recent Thanksgiving holiday lulled
their energy? Had the assigned readings provoked their thoughts? Had they
noticed the guest speaker, who preceded them and was sitting quietly toward
the front of the classroom? They seemed happy to reconnect with each other,
but would they reconnect with the content of the class?
The topic for the two-and-one-half hour session was “People with
Disabilities” and I had asked the students to come prepared to discuss
their reactions to the readings. Per usual, I had chosen a mix of articles
that encompassed a basic description of the topic—facts and figures
to give it definition, current research and/or controversies to give it
depth and complexity, and personal narratives to give it a human face.
For “People with Disabilities,” the context included a long
piece on the history of disability rights and its culmination into the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Controversies focused on challenges
to the intent and scope of the Act such as increasing rates of disability
fueled by the obesity epidemic and greater life expectancies due to improved
chronic disease management. And the human face featured an American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) Award address given by a nationally recognized
disabilities rights lawyer Stephen Gold, (who happens to be the father
of Haverford ’92 alum Rachel Gold) and a New York Times Magazine
article titled “Unspeakable Conversations or How I Spent One Day
as a Token Cripple at Princeton University,” by Harriet McBryde
Johnson.
I opened the discussion with a reminder about our first class (oh, so
long ago) in which I laid out a broad definition of health: total well-being
. . . physical, mental and social—and noted that health should be
viewed as an optimal state of being, whether one is “well,”
worried well (not yet sick), temporarily sick, or chronically ill. We
moved quickly from a medical model of health to a more encompassing one,
inclusive of factors that act as barriers to optimizing health. Is not
access to care a right for all? What about blatant disparities, primarily
income and race related, although gender, geographic, and system disparities
abound as well in the health care landscape? And what about the barriers
imposed by prevailing attitudes and stigmatization against certain health
conditions? While the course studies AIDS, mental illness, and substance
abuse, all conditions that can warrant disability benefits, these questions
seemed to have particular poignancy when applied to those with physical
disabilities. The controversies around these disabilities are accentuated
at the very beginning of life and the very end of life. Infanticide and
physician-assisted suicide are too often the unfriendly bookends framing
the debates around people with severe impairments.
It was not difficult to get a conversation going in class that day. “I
never realized . . .”; “I avoid looking at someone handicapped
. . .”; “I thought they’d rather be dead . . .”.
The remarks reflected characteristic discomfort, fears, and biases. They
also were indicative of how little the progressive community pays attention
to discrimination against the disabled. In his talk to the ACLU, Gold
challenges us: “Why is it so difficult for most people to consider
disability as a civil-rights issue on par with race, gender, and sexual
orientation?” He argues that while progress has been made in other
areas, the disability movement has been virtually ignored. Prevalent attitudes
of pity and paternalism, he asserts, do not form the basis for social
change.
A minority student expressed her resentment that racial and disability
discrimination were being lumped together: “They have different
roots and the solutions require different interventions.” Another
student, a turbaned Sikh, supported her noting that it costs money to
make vans handicapped-accessible, while integrating lunch counters did
not. Someone slightly overweight remarked that she felt the ADA was stretching
its interpretation by covering people with obesity. After all, eating
was primarily a behavior and could be controlled as such. Should limited
disability benefits be expended on someone obese rather than on a technologically
improved wheelchair for a quadriplegic? The topic was both current and
compelling. The class was clearly engaged . . . and it was time to introduce
my guest speaker.
Fran Fulton joined me in front of the class and at my suggestion stood
with me before a long desk where she hesitatingly placed her juice bottle.
A consumer advocate, Fran works at Liberty Resources, Inc., a nonprofit
that promotes disability rights and independent living for persons with
disabilities. After a brief introduction, Fran asked the class to identify
her disability. After a couple of wrong guesses and some awkward silences,
someone said, “. . . visually impaired.” Fran confirmed her
blindness and asked how the student had known. The student had observed
Fran’s difficulty in placing her drink on the table, although no
one had seen the earlier giveaway when Fran walked into the room with
a cane. Nor did Fran have a clue about the identities of the prior commentators.
She could not see the African American, the Sikh or the plump woman, each
of whom may have experienced discrimination themselves because of racial,
religious, and societal prejudices.
Prior to the class, Fran and I had agreed we would ask someone to sit
in a chair fully visible to the class as though it were a wheelchair and
he/she was quadriplegic. A student volunteered, was quickly assigned an
“Attendant” and instructed not to move either arms or legs
for the duration of the class. Fran then launched into her discussion—first
defining disability, then describing its magnitude and dimensions. Nearly
50 million Americans have physical or mental impairments that interfere
with their activities of daily living. The term disability refers to one
or more health-related conditions that limit carrying out socially defined
tasks and roles. The disability rights campaign, initially spurred by
paraplegics, dates back to 1947 but the country’s awareness of existing
architectural barriers was heightened when in 1957 Hugh Deffner, honored
by President Dwight Eisenhower as “Handicapped American of the Year,”
arrived at the Capitol to receive his award. The facility was inaccessible
to him and two marines carried him up the steps, an irony not lost to
advocates. Enactment of legislation slowly followed, highlighted by the
Architectural Barriers Act of 1968, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act in 1973 (with 504 regulations gradually implemented through the ’80s),
the Education for All Handicapped Children Act in 1975 and the Fair Housing
Amendments Act of 1988. The passage in 1990 of the Americans with Disabilities
Act, arguably the most important piece of civil rights legislation since
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, represented a culmination of these efforts
and a milestone for people with disabilities in enforcing the Constitution’s
guarantee of equal protection.
Fran’s presentation was punctuated by questions that she fielded
skillfully, whether about raising her children, searching for insurance
coverage and quality health services, fighting for community and home-based
care (instead of institutional), or mobilizing to bring disabled voters
to the polls in the November national election. She asked the students
to jot down something they did not like about themselves and when a few
shared their “warts,” Fran underscored how we all live with
limitations. Cannot disability be regarded as an aspect of life common
to us all in different ways? There was a noticeable pause in the lively
class interaction, as this question was pondered. Meanwhile the designated
paraplegic was motionless in her “wheelchair.” Fran and I
had conspired that I would ignore all obvious courtesies and in the course
of Fran’s teaching, I managed to push the wheelchair without its
occupant’s permission, lean on it and prop my feet against it, and
ask the Attendant if the occupant needed a drink or needed to go to the
bathroom. It was a quiet demonstration of “incorrectness”—invading
an individual’s personal space, not speaking directly to her and
talking about her as though she was not there.
Several students had picked up the gaffes. It gave the class an opportunity
to test its own sensitivities and segued into our discussion about the
New York Times article by Harriet Johnson, a lawyer whose body has been
impacted by more than four decades of a muscle-wasting disease. With virtually
no use of her limbs, the 70-pound Johnson describes the sight of herself
in her power wheelchair as “routinely discombobulating.” The
story revolves around Johnson flying to Princeton to give a talk at the
invitation of Peter Singer. Singer, an internationally famous philosopher,
supports legalization of killing severely impaired babies based on his
beliefs of giving parents that choice and alleviating human suffering.
In the words of Johnson, Singer assumes that “ . . . I am one of
the people who might rightly have been killed at birth . . . . He is the
man who wants me dead.” In my years of teaching, I cannot think
of another article that has triggered such heated responses. It touches
everyone . . . how does one define personhood? How does one measure quality
of life? What, in fact, is life?
As I tell my students, my goal by the end of the semester is that they
have more questions than answers. I think it fair to say that our class
on people with disabilities underscored that. That day in class, I believe
everyone spoke. Not everyone had answers, although having Fran there and
grappling with the issues in Johnson’s piece made the students think
hard . . . and perhaps differently. Fran had answered a central question:
How do you treat a person with a disability? “Like a person!”
she retorts. Harriet Johnson also has an answer: “. . . the presence
or absence of a disability doesn’t predict quality of life . . .
I used to try to explain that I enjoy my life . . . that I have no more
reason to kill myself than most people. But it gets tedious. “A
final remark by one of the students made me feel this class made an impact.
He said, “We forget it’s highly likely that each of us will
need to be cared for at some time in our lives. We can’t just make
it a “them” issue.” He is right. According to the 2000
Census, one out of every five people over the age of 5 in the United States
has a physical or mental impairment and for every disabled person it is
estimated there is a family of four to five other people who are profoundly
affected, socially and economically. The numbers of persons with disabilities
are expected to grow. Hopefully they will live in a more welcoming milieu,
bolstered by the kind of awareness reached in my Haverford class that
day.
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