| Volume 1, Number 10: |
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| TOPIC: The First Self-Advocacy Dictionary of the English Language | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Language is power. Some words, like developmental disability, have the power of money behind them. Other words, like moron, have the power of ridicule and shametwo thousand years of negative stereotypes. Still other more recent words, like People First, have the power of solidarity with others in the self-advocacy movement. When we decide which words are important and what they mean, we take this power into our own hands, using it to shape the world the way we want it to be. The Self-Advocacy Resource Network is compiling a dictionary of words of particular importance to self-advocates and allies. Words of oppression, words of empowerment, words that keep cropping up, or should be. Please join us in creating this power-full tool.
Exercise: Take Back the Power: Writing Your Own Definitions for Words
A words official meaning is often quite different from its meaning to someone in the self-advocacy movement. Take the word grave marker. The definition in the Websters dictionary reads: However, someone from the self-advocacy movement, who knows the recent history of state-run institutions, would perhaps give some different definitions:
Since language belongs to all of us, we can take the power to define the words that surround us in life. We can strengthen the self-advocacy movement by making our own dictionary. The First Self-Advocacy Dictionary of the English Language is now a work in progress. Wed like you to submit words that have been powerful in your life, words that are a part of your experience with disability rights and the self-advocacy movement. Tell us how you define them, what they mean to you. These could be positive or negative words, helpful or harmful words. These could be confusing technical terms or playful words. The definitions dont have to be dictionary-like. You may want to tell a story about the word. With this dictionary, we hope to empower each other to name a new realitya reality in which all people are respected, in which all people have the power of choice, and in which all people contribute to society.
Here are a few more definitions from The First Self-Advocacy Dictionary of the English Language. As you read these, please be thinking about other words you would like to include in the dictionary. assertive: 1. the way to communicate in order to get what you want in life. 2. you state your needs while also respecting others. 3. something you have to practice before you get good at. 4. how to act if you want to feel good about yourself. acronym: 1. a bunch of capital letters that stand for something, such as SARN (Self-Advocacy Resource Network) and ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) 2. a confusing nonword that you can never remember what it means, such as ICUYS (I Cant Understand Your Sentences), PUPE (Please Use Plain English) and ZRLMH (forgot this one). 3. a label others want you to wear before they can provide services (DD, MS, TBI, MR, MMI). choice: 1. a basic value of the self-advocacy movement, as in I have a choice of where and how I live. 2. something denied to people with disabilities for most of history. 3. whoever is in charge has it. 4. often something made by others and handed to people with disabilities. expert: 1. someone without a disability who has power over the life of a person with a disability (doctor, parent, special education teacher, speech therapist). 3. opposite of ally. eye contact: 1. what you dont get from people who see you only as a disability. 2. what you use when you are being assertive and getting what you want. Idiot: 1. (from Websters Dictionary) a feebleminded person having a mental age not exceeding three years and requiring complete custodial care. 2. another word for someone with a developmental disability. 3. a harmful label. 4. a word people use everyday to criticize others, meaning theyre a stupid worthless person. 5. a word that children commonly learn from childrens movies. leader: 1. a person who serves society (e.g., Rosa Parks, Ed Roberts). 2. any member of the self-advocacy movement, which is based on shared leadership. 3. someone who does more for the community than simply being a famous person, sports hero, rich person, beautiful person, elected official, highly-educated person or media darling. number: 1. a word that tells how many, such as 100 million people are involved in self-advocacy worldwide, or curb cuts, started by people with disabilities, have a positive effect on the lives of 60 million people in the US. 2. something instead of a name that was put on a grave marker to identify a person with a disability who died in a state institution. (See also: grave marker.) special: 1. a word used by con artists to get you to buy something of poor quality, as in Have I got a special deal for you. 2. something at the store that you can buy at a reduced price, as in Day-old donuts are on special today. 3. how someone without a disability describes someone with a disability We have 24 normal students and one special student. 4. someone who is not treated as a regular person.
The following is a list of words we are working on. We would like more input from you about how these words are used. Specifically, we would like two types of feedback: definitions and examples showing how these words are used. Remember, words can have more than one meaning. A words official meaning is often quite different from its meaning to a self-advocate. Here are some particular words were looking to include: client, PCA, counselor, victim, sheltered workshop, group home, cripple, self-advocate, power, job, inclusion, segregation, nonsense, disability, pity, charity, sexuality, retarded, institution, dignity.
Its easy. Just send us a note to act@selfadvocacy.org including some or all of the items listed below:
Most resources on self-advocacy, stereotypes, disability culture and disability rights will be full of useful, powerful words. See, for instance:
When your self-advocacy group gets together, try coming up with some entries for the new Dictionary. Say: Now we are going to do a fun exercise to try to come up with our own definitions for some important words in our lives, words that come from our reality as self-advocates, words that come from our joys and struggles.
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ACT grants all memo subscribers the rights to use any and all contents of this memo with attribution as follows: Source: Advocating Change Together, Inc. Advocating Change Together (ACT) is a self-advocacy disability rights organization, started in 1979, whose goal is the advancement of self-advocacy as a civil right for persons with developmental and other disabilities. ACT has developed tools and materials that help individuals and groups promote self-advocacy in their lives and work. Call
for catalog: Copyright © 2004 Advocating Change Together. All rights reserved. |
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