Four ways to bring disability history into your curriculum
OUP Education
Welcome to Oxford, where everything we do is for the love of learning.
Learn how to implement a more inclusive History curriculum by bringing disabled people from Britain’s past into the classroom. Practical ideas from Phillipa Vincent-Connolly historian, writer, and published author of historical fiction and non-fiction.
As teachers, we all have a duty of care to our vulnerable and SEN registered students. However, are we ignoring this duty when we fail to teach, and include the stories of disabled people on our history curricula? The Equality Act of 2010, is deeply founded in human rights, but does the history we teach represent the life experiences, and political and social struggles of disabled people of the past, and the recent past?
As a disabled teacher with cerebral palsy, a PhD researcher of disability history, trying to implement disability history into the curriculum, I would say, ‘no’. For context, I am a strong believer that we need disabled teachers in schools as role models, who should be trained as SENCOs, as we have life experience, and training to deal with challenges, outside agencies, discrimination, physical disabilities, and learning difficulties, equipping us to be empathetic to those students who might be in our care.
How do we as History teachers show our students that being disabled is just another way of being human, and part of our society? As well as schools reflecting the diversity of our society – which at the moment, they do not – students should be able to engage with a curriculum that resonates and reflects their life experiences. We need to bring the voiceless, and under-represented into our classrooms with confidence.
1. Build your subject knowledge
A starting point is research. There are some amazing historians researching disability history: some are researching Egyptian disability history, others are looking at the 1990s and the changing landscape of disability human rights. Connect with historians working in this field on social media to save valuable time in constructing histories of disability in Britain.
2. Link to topics you’re already covering
Link your themes to topics already studied on the National Curriculum, so that these histories ‘slot in’ to what is already being studied, rather than being a ‘bolt-on’.
Here are some examples:
领英推荐
3. Connect with historians
Gain knowledge and connect with historians researching disability history, such as Dr Alexandra Morris, Dr Debby Sneed, Dr David Turner, Professor Suzannah Lipscomb, Simon Jarrett, Dr Rosamund Oates, myself, and others in the field, who will be only too delighted to share their expertise.
4. Draw on first-hand accounts to dispel ignorance
Teachers sometimes feel like novices in this area of study, and we need to be sensitive to the language used around and in disability history, as well as ableism, discrimination, and tropes. One way to discuss disability history is through its various models, such as cultural, medical, and social. Disability history is intersectional, and as such has the ability for these issues to be discussed across the curriculum in History, RE, PSHE, and in diversity assemblies.
We need to present disabled people as role models in our society, so that SEN students can visualise themselves reflected in our communities. All students need to have explicit, positive role models with whom they can identify, and unless we are open to teaching disability history, our students can never be enriched in this way.
This article was written by Phillipa Vincent-Connolly for OUP Education and originally published on the Oxford Education Blog where you can read more on creating an inclusive History classroom.