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date: 21 April 2025

Autism, Neurodiversity, and Inclusive Educationlocked

Autism, Neurodiversity, and Inclusive Educationlocked

  • Sara M. AcevedoSara M. AcevedoMiami University of Ohio
  • , and Emily A. NusbaumEmily A. NusbaumUniversity of San Francisco

Summary

A brief history of the emergence of the inclusive schools movement demonstrates its reliance on the pathologizing paradigms that are both the foundations and frameworks of traditional special education. Throughout this recent history, the utilization of a positivist approach to research and practice for autistic students, both those who are segregated and those who have access to mainstream classrooms, has maintained a person-fixing ideology. Instead, a neurodiversity framework adopts an integrative approach, drawing on the psychosocial, cultural, and political elements that effectively disrupt the systematic categorization of alternative neurological and cognitive embodiment(s) and expressions as a host of threatening “disorders” that must be dealt with by cure, training, masking, and/or behavioral interventions to be implemented in the classroom. Centering the personal, lived experiences and perspectives of autistic and otherwise neurodivergent activists and scholars affiliated with the U.S. neurodiversity movement offers an emancipatory lens for representing and embodying neurological differences beyond traditional special education’s deficit-based discourses and practices. This emphasis on political advocacy and cultural self-authorship effectively challenges unexamined, universalizing assumptions about whose bodyminds are “educable” and under what auspices “educability” is conceptualized and written into special-education curricula.

Subjects

  • Education, Health, and Social Services
  • Educational Systems
  • Educational Theories and Philosophies
  • Education and Society
  • Educational History

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