Title: Attitudes Started It All
1Attitudes Started It All
- An Introduction to Independent Living -
- History and Movement
2ATTITUDES STARTED IT ALL
- Looking at our history as people with
disabilities can help us see where we have come
from and where we are going.
3The Ancient Era 1500 B.C.-475 A.D.
4Nomadic Tribes
- Considered people with disabilities useless
because they couldnt contribute to the wealth of
the tribe - Often left people with disabilities to die
whenever the tribe moved to a new location
5Greeks and the Ancient Era
- Ancient people struggled
- to explain their world
- Natural phenomena, such
- as storms or the change
- of seasons were attributed to gods or some
sort of intervention by higher beings - The Greeks sought more rational reasons,
however, for disability.
6Greeks and the Ancient Era
- They reached such conclusions as
- Epilepsy was a disturbance of the mind
- People who were deaf could not learn because
communication was essential to learning. - The Greeks referred to people with intellectual
deficiencies as idiots.
7The Word Idiot
- The word idiot comes from the Greek word idios
referring to a person who was not a public
official. It then came to refer to one who
lacked professional knowledge and later to one
who was ignorant, or ill-informed.
8Early Christianity
- Early Christianity brought a period of sympathy
and pity. - Churches organized services for people with
disabilities within their congregations and
homes. - Many Christians held superior attitudes
- -Resulted in a general loss of autonomy
9Early Christianity continued
- To many disability represented impurity of some
kind. - This impurity could be purged through worship and
forgiveness of sins
10The Middle Ages Renaissance, and Reformation
476 A.D.-1500 A.D.
11The Middle Ages
- A period marked by indifference, neglect, and
fear for people with disabilities - People with disabilities were
- considered to be the fools
- and court jesters employed
- to entertain nobility
12The Middle Ages continued
- First Asylum for abandoned infants was founded in
787 AD - Conditions at this and other such institutions
were custodial at best
13Idiot Cages
- Idiot cages
- Their purpose
- Keep people with disabilities out of trouble.
- May have also served
- as entertainment for
- townspeople.
14Ship of Fools
- Some persons with disabilities,
- were shipped off to other
- lands.
- So they would no longer pose a
- burden.
- This practice led to the Ships of Fools
15Ships of Fools
- The legend of the Ships of Fools is
- -Well-documented in literature
- -A symbol of perceptions of madness and other
disabilities. - The popularity of the legend suggests that
society wanted to separate itself from deviant
populations.
16More about the Middle Ages
- Christians became fearful of people with
disabilities as their attraction to
supernaturalism increased. - People with disabilities were not only ridiculed
but persecuted as well. - Disability became a manifestation of evil.
17Segregation for Economic Survival
- Economic survival was a strong motivation for
segregation - Persons with disabilities were likely among the
poorest citizens
18The Renaissance
- Brought the initiation of medical care and
treatment for people with disabilities. - Education was available to people with
disabilities for the first time in Western
recorded history.
19The Renaissance continued
- Active participation of people with disabilities
seemed to be encouraged in their communities. - This is not to say that people with disabilities
were not often institutionalized.
20The Reformation
- Had a profound effect on how people perceived
disability - Persons with disabilities were treated as
subhuman organisms during this time period. - Periods from the Renaissance through World War II
indicated that society believed that people with
disabilities might be educated - Usually in special segregated programs or
schools
21The 17th and 18th Centuries
- More constructive and scientific approach to
individuals with disabilities. Some people who
studied human nature and disability included - Thomas Hobbes
- John Locke
22American Colonies
- First settlers would not admit people with
disabilities - Immigration was restricted
23Living Conditions
- Were harsh in the
- early 19th century
- Persons who lived in
- poverty
- Often put in poorhouses
- Wealthier parents
- Tended to keep children with disabilities at home
24Other Practices in the Early 19th Century
25Extreme Wealth and Extreme Poverty
- The 1820s
- Climate of enormous wealth in the growing
industrial cities - Extreme poverty felt in a large number of rural
and urban areas - People began to speak out for people who were
oppressed or neglected.
26Extreme Wealth and Extreme Poverty continued
- The 1880s
- Most states and territories had some programs for
people with disabilities - Most of these programs were in large institutions.
27Invisibility and Abandonment (1925-1950)
- At least one state supported institution existed
in every state - The number of residents increased from
25,000-50,000 - Professional views of persons with disabilities
began to change.
28Economic Depression and Lack of Education
- In spite of changing views, the
- size and number of institutions
- continued to grow. This growth
- was in part due to
- The Depression
- The lack of educational services
29Extreme Consequences of Eugenics
- United States-Housed large number of persons in
institutions - Germany in 1930-The Holocaust
30The American Frontier Movement
- Community-based services began to emerge
- Rural areas-where people with disabilities tended
to be in integrated settings.
31Rehabilitation Services
- Rehabilitation services were introduced as a
federal program following WWI. - Emphasis on veterans with disabilities returning
home - Vocational Rehabilitation System
32Social Change Movements During the 1960s
- Other major services for people with disabilities
were seriously considered by federal legislation - Intensive examination of the human service
delivery system - Community-based programs for people with
disabilities began growing - New concepts, new technology, and new attitudes
began to make a difference.
33The Impact of Other Social Movements
- Five other social movements of the 1960s and
70s contributed to the evolving movement for
independent living for people with disabilities.
These were - Civil Rights Movement
- Consumerism
- Self-help
- De-medicalization
- De-institutionalization
34Ed Roberts Father of the Independent Living
Movement
35The Impact of Other Social Movements
- People with disabilities pointed out that they
were being denied access to basic services and
opportunities. - Similarities in Rosa Parks and people with
disabilities accessing the bus/community.
36My Involvement in the Independent Living Movement
37Where Do We Go From Here?
38The Quiz
39- The word idiot is used everyday in television and
in the movies. To refer to someone as an idiot
in everyday conversation is - Ok, because it no longer refers to people with
mental retardation. - Ok, because the word refers to stupid actions,
not the people themselves. - Not acceptable
- Not acceptable because it should only be used in
a clinical application.
40- Divine intervention, the belief that children are
born with disabilities because it is the will of
God, or the gods, is a belief prevalent in which
era(s)? - The Ancient Era
- The Middle ages
- The 20th Century
- All of the above
41- The practice of exposure, leaving people out in
the weather to die, and infanticide, the
deliberate killing of infants - Disappeared after Christianity became widespread
- Continue to the present day
- Were outlawed by the Elizabethan Poor Laws
- Were outlawed after World War II when the Nazi
death camps were exposed.
42- Prevailing public policy and funding priorities
promote keeping children with disabilities with
their families over other alternatives. - True or False?
43- The ability to be productive repay society for
what one receives, determines a persons worth,
only those programs for people with disabilities
that yield a positive monetary return on
investment should be funded. - True or False?
44- Throughout history, people with disabilities have
generally been relegated to the lowest economic
strata of society. One way for them to eke out
their survival was through begging. Today
because of our heightened awareness of the
impoverishment of many people with disabilities
the increased availability of programs designed
to enhance their economic success, people with
disabilities are no longer forced to beg for
their living. - True or False?
45- Developmental Disabilities are caused by
- Genetics
- Environment
- Divine Interventions
- A B
46- Sterilizing people with mental retardation to
keep them from having children with
disabilities. - Was discontinued after World War II
- Was never practiced in the U.S.
- Continued into the latter part of the 20th
century - Was considered inhumane treatment by Samuel
Gridley Howe
47- The original function of the Stanford-Binet IQ
test was - To determine the innate mental ability of U.S.
army recruits - To measure the intelligence of normal children
- To exclude children with mental retardation from
the public education system - To identify help children with learning
disabilities
48I would like to express my sincere thanks to the
Brazoria County Center for Independent Living for
their dedication, commitment, and their technical
support in this training.
Materials used in
this training included BCCILs Advocacy Skills
Training-IL History and Movement. Materials were
used with express written permission for training
and facilitation purposes only. BCCILs Advocacy
Skills Training was developed with materials
from the Minnesota Governors Council on
Developmental Disabilities Parallels in
Time-Historical Perspectives on Disability CD
ROM. Materials used from the Parallels in Time
CD ROM were used with expressed written
permission for training and facilitation purposes
only. For more information, contact Colleen
Wieck, PhD., Executive Director, The Minnesota
Governors Council on Developmental Disabilities,
370 Centennial Office Building. 658 Cedar
Street, St. Paul, Minnesota 55155, Phone
651-296-4019, TTY 651-296-9962. Fax
651-297-7200. Toll-free number 1-877-348-0505 A
copy of this written permission is maintained on
file at the Brazoria County Center for
Independent Living. For more information, contact
Chamane Barrow, Associate Director, Brazoria
County Center for Independent Living (BCCIL),
1100 D East Mulberry, Angleton, Texas 77515,
Phone 979-849-7060 V/TTY. Fax 979-849-8465.