Date of Award
5-2013
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Legacy Department
Educational Leadership
Committee Chair/Advisor
Lindle, Jane C
Committee Member
Brewer , Curtis
Committee Member
First , Patricia
Committee Member
Stecker , Pamela
Abstract
This study focused on terms anchored in special education and associated stigma of disability in schools. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act ensured the right to education in US public school systems for students with disabilities. An associated term asserted that children with disabilities must be educated in the least restrictive environment (LRE). Yet, IDEA did not address the institutional or social stigma arising in the wake of labeling students as disabled. The stigma, a result of ableism, promotes a premise of normalcy and marginalizes students with disabilities. This study was a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of the LRE clause. This intensive CDA investigated LRE from macro-policy terms through interpretations at state and local levels into one public school system among selected elementary school principals.
Theoretical frameworks of positivism have dominated research and professional practices in the field of special education. However, the terminology and discourse associated with IDEA has largely gone unchallenged. CDA was used to answer the following research questions:
Does the LRE clause of the IDEA create or reinforce institutional ableism?
* What discourse themes can be interpreted from the textual choices within case law interpretations and federal regulations related to LRE?
* What discourse themes can be interpreted from the textual choices in the LRE section of the South Carolina Office of Exceptional Children Process Guide?
* What discourse themes can be interpreted from the textual choices within a selected urban district's policies and guidelines related to LRE?
* What discourse themes can be interpreted from the textual choices found in face-to-face interviews with five traditional elementary school principals?
Three cycles of coding were applied to elicit discourse strands, or themes, within the data. Resulting themes included use of dichotomous language, individual deficit models of disability, hegemonic struggles between students, parents, teachers, school administrators, and central office support staff. Additionally, the voices of participants provided an opportunity to expand the study and consider additional themes and an emerging theory about the educational ecosystem of a school.
Recommended Citation
O'laughlin, Laura, "The Least Restrictive Environment Clause of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act and Institutional Ableism: A Critical Discourse Analysis" (2013). All Dissertations. 1114.
https://open.clemson.edu/all_dissertations/1114