ripcity wrote:
Which term do you use? I don't think there is a wrong answer, just personal opinion. I grew up with the term "Learning Disability", and never really had a problem with it. I take issue with Learning Difference. I find the term condensending. Not as much as I'm used to though. Now my problem with the term is, that if I learn differently than most do. Why am I being taught the same way? I think because I learn diffrently and there is no real sign that schools will ever do any thing more than dumb down sh**. I will be at a disadvantage. I'm also ok with Learning Disadvantage.
I don't follow your logic. If teachers won't do anything to "help" other than dumb down unnecessarily, then surely, that's their fault for putting you at a disadvantage. I don't see what's condescending about the term "learning difference". It seems like the most accurate description of the
direct effects of a person's Autism. I'd rather not perpetuate a negative stigma about my own kind, which is why I take issue with the other two terms.
If teachers would actually attempt to understand the way each individual learns, we wouldn't be so disadvantaged, and when describing a mental condition, I only ever go by the direct effects of said condition.
paris75007 wrote:
I don't really get why you feel that's more condescending than a disability. Disability means (if you break the word down into its components) that you are "not able" to do something. A blind person is "not able" to see, a paraplegic person is "not able" to walk, but a child with what is commonly categorized as a learning disability is clearly able to learn, just in a different manner that what we refer to as typical.
Good point.
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Jane