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Reflexivity and Change in Adaptive Physical Activity: Overcoming Hubris [Hardback]

Edited by (Brock University, Canada), Edited by (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 254 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 650 g, 1 Tables, black and white; 3 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Disability Sport and Physical Activity Cultures
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032018887
  • ISBN-13: 9781032018881
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 171,76 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 254 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 650 g, 1 Tables, black and white; 3 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Disability Sport and Physical Activity Cultures
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032018887
  • ISBN-13: 9781032018881
This provocative and challenging book argues for the vital importance of critical self-reflexion in the field of adaptive physical activity (APA).

It makes a powerful case for embracing discussions of the harm caused by ableist assumptions of the ideal body, maximizing capabilities and perfecting normative-based movement that dominate contemporary discourse in APA, and calls for more critical introspection about what APA is, how it is performed, and what might be needed to bring a collaborative relational ethic to this field. The book focuses on two key themes. Firstly, how ableism as a foundational belief system of APA is present in the undergraduate curriculum, professional preparation, professional practice, and organizational policies. Secondly, how to make the comfortable uncomfortable by openly debating the harm that results from non-reflexive (nondisabled) hubris in APA. The goal is to spark an exchange of ideas among scholars, practitioners, and organizational leaders and therefore to shift the paradigm from one of professional expertism to one that centres disability wisdom holders, bringing a fundamental change to how we perform adaptive physical activity.

This book is important, progressive reading for anybody with an interest in adaptive physical activity, adapted physical education, disability sport, inclusive education, the philosophy and ethics of disability and sport, or disability in wider society.
Contributors viii
Ableism Hiding in Plain Sight: An Introduction in Four Acts 1(8)
Maureen Connolly
PART I Making the Comfortable Uncomfortable
9(50)
1 Disrupting Ableism in Adaptive Physical Activity through Anti-ableist Research and Practice
11(10)
Karen P. Depauw
2 10 Things I Hate about `Inclusion' in Physical Education
21(13)
Justin A. Haegele
Wesley J. Wilson
3 Disablism, Ableism, and Enlightened Ableism in Contemporary Adapted Physical Activity Textbooks: Practising What We Preach?
34(13)
Danielle Peers
Lindsay Eales
Donna Goodwin
4 The Ethics of Wilful Ignorance: "Someone Needs to Tell Those Parents There Is Something Wrong with Their Kid"
47(12)
Donna Goodwin
PART II Ableism in Adaptive Physical Activity: The Taken-for-Granted
59(38)
5 Adaptive Physical Activity Practices That Can Perpetuate or Perpetrate Trauma and Mental Distress: More Harm Than Good?
61(13)
Lindsay Eales
6 Counterstories of Community Service Learning: "We Are Not an Eight-Hour Dumping Ground"
74(12)
Kyoung June Yi
7 Emulating Disability: Disrupting a Taken-for-granted Practice
86(11)
Jennifer Leo
PART III Social Justice and Critical Pedagogy
97(52)
8 Critical Self-Reflexivity in the Education of Adaptive Physical Activity Practitioners: Disputing the Severely Able-bodied Student
99(11)
Øyvind Forland Standal
9 Towards a Critical Discourse of Physical Literacy in Adapted Physical Activity
110(13)
Kyle Pushkarenko
10 Intersectionality, Disability, Justice, and Critical Pedagogy
123(13)
Samuel R. Hodge
Ross D. Jordan
Kimberly J. Smith
11 Engaging in Reflexive Writing in Adaptive Physical Activity
136(13)
Brenda Rossow Kimball
PART IV Organizational Spaces that Exclude
149(40)
12 Ableism within Adapted/Physical Education Teacher Education: Implications for Practice
151(12)
Michelle Grenier
Martin Giese
13 Divergent Professionalism in Inclusive Physical Education: Neglecting Collaboration in Preparation, Professional Development, and Practice
163(12)
Hayley J. Morrison
14 Dis/ability Sport for "All": The Ultimate Dream
175(14)
Carla Filomena Silva
P. David Howe
PART V Reflexivity: A Moral Imperative for Change and Optimism
189(50)
15 Reflections on Sport, Disability, and the Need for Adaptive Physical Activity to Evolve: Growing Up
191(9)
Heather R. Kuttai
16 Critical Service-Learning and Reflection on Power and Assumptive Thinking
200(13)
Jihoun An
17 Inspiration Porn and Disability Sport
213(14)
Jeffrey J. Martin
18 How Critical Engagement with Embodiment, Agency, and Hope Contributes to Authentic Pedagogy in Adaptive Physical Activity
227(12)
Maureen Connolly
Conclusion: An Emerging Era for Adaptive Physical Activity 239(8)
Donna Goodwin
Index 247
Donna Goodwin is Professor Emerita in the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation at the University of Alberta, Canada. Her research focuses on bringing to light the literal and metaphorical lives of disabled people as they negotiate the social and cultural impediments to engagement in physical activity and community life. She grounds her teaching philosophy in the need for crucial self-reflexion on taken-for granted pedagogical practices in teacher education and professional service delivery.

Maureen Connolly is Professor of Physical Education and Kinesiology in the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences at Brock University, Canada. Maureen works with qualitative arts-based inquiry, narrative, poetic, and bodily expressive modalities and how these function across scholarly, pedagogic, and other creative outlets. She is a YWCA Woman of Distinction, a university teaching award winner and 3M National Teaching Fellow (2003), and a 2009 Erasmus Mundus scholar. Her teaching and research interests include curriculum, stressed embodiment, dance, and movement education.