Attending to Disability

Oct 14, 2025

In this reflective writing, teacher Andrew elaborated on how his teacher training at the Elementary Teacher Education Program (ELTEP) and teaching experiences as an elementary resource room teacher deepened his understanding and advocacy for disability justice. Through ELTEP, he learned to position every student as a general education student first and adopt identity-first languages. However, as he transitioned into an elementary resource room teacher role, he quickly noticed the prevalent medical approach his teacher colleagues held toward multilingual and learning-disabled students. Through this medical lens on students’ special needs, educators quickly diagnose, label, and implement interventions to treat and cure the disabilities that lie within individual students. Instead of adopting this “quick fix,” he kept in mind the potential harm in placing a student in special education and his principal’s words: “a disability is something that doesn’t go away.” With this sense of care and criticality, he reviewed historical Special Education case laws and proposed expanding teachers’ mindset to move beyond the medical model toward a social and/or neurodiversity model of disability. By proposing Universal Design for Learning (UDL) for all students to succeed, Andrew disrupts the common misunderstanding that disability is an individual, instead of a systemic issue.    

Teaching Considerations

Creating Communities of Care: A Path Forward

Moving Past Legal Requirements

While knowing about the laws around special education has helped me and hopefully will help other teachers in advocating for disability justice and communities of care, I feel that we must look beyond exclusively state solutions. IDEA, Section 504, and ADA have all brought important gains for students and individuals with disabilities, but students and families deserve better than the lengthy process of qualification and often lackadaisical focus on delivering services that many experience in our schools.

By creating ways to increase our interdependence and liberate each other, we avoid greater state involvement in our classrooms and schools, as “state solutions inevitably extend into further control over lives” (https://sinsinvalid.org/10-principles-of-disability-justice/).

Universal Design for Learning (UDL)

Teaching practices that utilize Universal Design for Learning have the potential to be an extralegal “grassroots solution.” UDL focuses on adjusting the environment so that disabilities are not present or impactful. A simple example of this is installing a ramp so that people with wheelchairs can access locations. This ramp can help other people who aren’t in wheelchairs as well, which makes it universally beneficial. In “Rethinking Disability and Mathematics,” Lambert points out that “differences in attention occur across” the entire population, and thus “adapting classrooms to work for students with ADHD will not just help those students, but all of us.”

UNIVERSAL DESIGN FOR LEARNING GUIDELINES (SOURCE: https://udlguidelines.cast.org/?utm_source=castsite&lutm_medium=web&utm_campaign=none&utm_content=aboutudl)

Shifting Our Mindsets

Mindset reframing is another step educators can take toward promoting disability justice. We can evolve from a dominant Western medical model, in which we perceive disability as a function of the person in need of remediation, toward a social model or neurodiversity model.

In the social model, disability is perceived to result from the environment. We can ask ourselves how our expectations for students actually manifest their so-called disabilities. For example, in our math classes, do we value memorization, quick computation, and fluency with singular rote procedures—or are creative thinking, use of visuals, and connections to real life seen as worthwhile forms of doing math? By prizing specific ways of learning and demonstrating knowledge, teachers and school systems often inadvertently create or amplify the appearance of disabilities in students who are actually just diverse thinkers.

The neurodiverse model of disability arose from Autism advocates in the 1990s. People with disabilities do indeed have challenges and limitations, but they also have many strengths and unique ways of seeing and being in the world. These unique qualities are part of the natural cognitive diversity of all people, which neurodiverse advocacy celebrates as part of a beautiful and evolving tapestry of the human community. By embracing this model, along with the social model, we see diversity not as a deficiency but as a benefit that strengthens our school and social community.

The Power of Teacher Mindset

Creating communities of care within our classrooms and schools starts with shifting our own mindsets about multilingual and disabled students. In order for us to truly know what our students are capable of, we have to let them actually try and think for themselves. We can and often must give students with disabilities more structure and support, but we must also value their unique (often tactile/visual/spatial) ways of doing and thinking. Is the problem that we are asking them to do something that they can’t do, or that we think they can’t do, or that we are designing our instruction and assessment in a way that sets them up to fail?

Equity

Through ELTEP, I learned to question the roles of power and history in my classroom, school, and society and to imagine a more just and joyful future. I thought about how we can position languages, cultures, and families as invaluable parts of our classroom communities of care. I will continue to advocate for multilingual and disability justice through the lens of history, power, and futures, with a focus on creating school and social cultures of interdependence and care.

Stories

Jeremy and the Dangers of Exclusion

This became increasingly apparent to me during some tense meetings with parents, colleagues, and administration regarding a behaviorally challenged student during my 4th grade teaching internship. Jeremy loved Pokémon, excelled at giving detailed and well-constructed presentations about topics of interest, and playing games with his friends. He also was diagnosed with severe ADHD, was thought by some to have oppositional defiance disorder, and loved screaming, slamming doors, and running amok in the hallways—details which often took precedence over his interests and strengths during discussions about him.

One afternoon, my school’s principal, student intervention coordinator, special education teacher, and I were meeting about Jeremy’s increasingly disruptive and destructive behavior. As different options were discussed—ranging from hiring a one-on-one support person to fully remove him from general education and place him into a behavior room—I felt a growing tension between my lack of knowledge around special education laws and policies and my desire to do what was right for Jeremy. Unfamiliar terms like “due process rights,” “least restrictive environment,” and “exclusionary discipline” were floating around like birds of prey that threatened to derail my budding teaching career at its outset.

“Why can’t we just move him to the behavior room? Riley’s younger brother is in there, and he’s nowhere near as bad as Jeremy!” argued my mentor.

“His mom would never agree to that, and she would probably threaten a lawsuit if we even suggested it,” replied an exasperated Rune, Jeremy’s special education teacher.

What I didn’t learn through ELTEP: Special Education Case Laws

 

1. Diana v. State Board of Education (1970)

A Spanish-speaking student was tested with English-only assessments. The court ruled that Special Education evaluations for students who speak a language other than English must be conducted by qualified individuals in the student’s home language. This was a major step toward culturally and linguistically responsive practices in Special Education. 

2. Larry P. v. Riles (1979)

An African American student was placed in special education track based on his poor performance on a standardized IQ test for which he had very few cultural referents. The court ruled that standardized IQ tests cannot be used as a sole determinant for placement in Special Education programs. 

3. Honing v. Doe (1988)

Schools aren’t allowed to unilaterally place a student in a more restrictive environment (including suspension) due to disability-related behavior for more than 10 days during a given school year. (In Special Education lingo, restrictive environment refers to a classroom or facility that is removed from a student’s same-age non-disabled peers or home-school. For example, a 9-year-old student with Autism who spends most of her day in a general education 4th-grade classroom is in her Least Restrictive Environment [LRE], while a medically fragile student with multiple disabilities who is educated in a hospital or care facility is in a much more restrictive environment. The LRE is individualized to each student based on their needs, goals, and other factors.) There is a provision in this ruling that allows schools to make unilateral choices about student placement in case of emergencies, but Jeremy’s behaviors, although highly disruptive, did not include bringing a weapon or drugs to school, or inflicting serious bodily harm, so that was also ruled out. 

Thus, the school cannot put him in a more restrictive environment. Jeremy’s behavior was clearly serving a purpose for him, and it was also highly disruptive to our classroom community. My colleagues were asking for further removal of Jeremy. As a current Special Education teacher, my newfound understanding of IDEA and the dark history of exclusionary special education norms in the U.S. gives me a shudder to think of this, even though at the time I was mostly in agreement with their conclusions. Jeremy was clearly struggling to make adequate progress in his Least Restrictive classroom environment, but one question kept coming up for me. Was the problem within Jeremy, or within the environment?

Before the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975, which preceded IDEA, disabled students were often “educated” in completely separate facilities from their non-disabled peers. Disabled students who were considered “educable” (a horrendous idea now, but common at the time—who gets to determine which students are “educable?”) might have been allowed to attend regular schools, but they had none of the current safeguards that students have in our schools. Removing Jeremy from his peers without his family’s input would be to take disability justice backward.

Teacher Educators & Professional Learning

The Continuous Cycle of Roadbumps, Reflections, and Growth 

I have a confession to make. In my second year of teaching, after surviving a difficult and chaotic first year as an unprepared and largely unqualified resource room teacher, I thought I knew what I was doing. I felt confident in my ability to use the curriculum in ways that matched my students’ needs, create schedules and manage the tasks of my para-educators, and help homeroom teachers understand my students’ accommodations. I had completed the preliminary coursework of my special education endorsement and had a pretty good knowledge of special education laws, purposes, and legal documents.

Going into my second year, I had high expectations of myself. If I could do as well as I had done my first year “without having a clue what I’m doing,“ then I should be able to do really well with a little experience under my belt and a little more knowledge in my head. I was in for a rude awakening in the form of two unplanned-for kindergarteners, Aaron and Keith.

How did I unwittingly perpetuate the dominant structure in education of holding low expectations for multilingual students and students with learning disabilities in order to avoid or mitigate potential disruptive behaviors and adult discomfort? How can I push myself and my school for meaningful inclusion that goes beyond simply “being in the room” with peers?

“His goal is to stay in the room and be safe.”

“Everything else will come with time in class, being around peers, etc.”

Related Posts

This site is primarily funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through Award #1907471 and #1315995