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Focusing on 'Can'ts' Limits Future Employment Potential for People with Disabilities: How You Can Change the Rhetoric

description

Since the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the needle for employment has moved very little for people with disabilities. The underlying barriers preventing forward momentum are ableism and attitudinal barriers, beginning with how we message to youth with disabilities. While most people grow up being told ‘you can do anything if you work hard enough,’ the message for youth with disabilities is that they can’t do what other children can. This message is reinforced in school systems, in the home, and in the community and is compounded by horrific experiences of being bullied. The idea of ‘can’t’ becomes internalized rhetoric that prevents young people with disabilities from engaging in vocational and transitional services, seeking additional education, applying for career opportunities and promotions, and setting life goals. For return-to-work professionals who have gained a disability later in life, they are brought into the disability community from a medical model perspective. The focus is on the limitations introduced by a medical diagnosis, and how that impacts career and lifestyle, as opposed to a focus on exploring innovative accommodations options and making connections to the Disability Community as a societal group. For those with a diagnosis of a non-apparent disability, an additional component is added where stigma and ableism must be addressed that both prevents them from disclosing their disability as well as seeking out services they may believe are available and appropriate for those with apparent disabilities, such as vocational services, corporate return-to-work programming and accommodations interactive processes.

Credits: 1.0 CEs of the following credits have been applied: ABVE, CCMC, CDMS, CLCP-MSCC, CRC-CVE
  • CE approval codes valid through February 2024.


Learning Objectives

  1. Identify examples of ableism in the school, home, and community that become barriers to potential such as pity, exclusion, inspiration, and patronization.
  2. Explain why a critical success factor of transitional services is to raise the bar for youth with disabilities.
  3. Explain the attitudinal barriers for individuals with disabilities transitioning into the workforce and return-to-work professionals, both from the employer perspective and the individual with a disability.