“Everyone is normal, and everyone has a disability”: Narratives of university students with visual impairment

Nitsan Almog

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

University students with visual impairment in Israel and worldwide face multiple academic and social barriers and must develop techniques, strategies and skills to adjust to the university environment. The current article is based on a longitudinal qualitative study aimed at incorporating students’ voices and offers some insight into the ways students experience their academic journeys. The research method combined grounded theory with the emancipatory disability research paradigm, which draws explicitly from people with disabilities’ collective experience and thus directly challenges this group’s widespread social oppression. This combination allowed the researcher to focus on students’ initial experiences as subjectively perceived. Sixteen students all defined as legally blind, from four universities in Israel, were interviewed over a 2-year period of their studies. The findings present two complementary narratives the interviewees used while configuring their identities. The article will focus on findings that suggest that during their academic journeys, students needed to manage a process of integrating their identity both as disabled and as students, choosing when and where to perform each identity and determining what the implications of each choice were along with each one’s related costs and benefits. The study’s implications and recommendations can help professionals and support services improve inclusion and equality in higher education.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)218-229
Number of pages12
JournalSocial Inclusion
Volume6
Issue number4Students with Disabilities in Higher Education
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 Dec 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 by the author.

Funding

The research was supported by the Presidential Scholarship for Excellence, Bar-Ilan University. I thank all the students who have shared their stories with me throughout the years. I also gratefully acknowledge the anonymous referees whose careful responses to this article have dramatically improved it.

FundersFunder number
Bar-Ilan University

    Keywords

    • Disability studies
    • Higher education
    • Identity
    • Students
    • Visual impairment

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