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Research Articles

Journeys from discomfort to comfort: how do university students experience being taught and assessed by adults with intellectual disabilities?

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Pages 993-1017 | Received 13 Dec 2019, Accepted 12 Dec 2020, Published online: 29 Jan 2021
 

Abstract

From 2016-17, academics at a leading Irish university collaborated with a group of self- advocates with intellectual disabilities to co-design, co-deliver, and co-assess an entire disability module for third-year undergraduate social work students. There are few, if any, reports of university modules of this type, involving adults with intellectual disabilities, in the existing literature. Alongside and after the module, our group of academics and self-advocates conducted inclusive research regarding relevant stakeholders’ experiences of the initiative. This paper relates to university students’ experiences of being taught and assessed by adults with intellectual disabilities. These experiences were overwhelmingly positive with reported benefits including increased comfort around disability and greater empathy with people with people with disabilities. This said, some aspects of being taught and assessed by self-advocates with intellectual disabilities also provoked considerable anxiety among students.

    Points of interest

  • From 2016 to 2017, academics at a leading Irish university collaborated with a group of self-advocates with intellectual disabilities to design, teach and mark a disability module for social work students.

  • The group also conducted inclusive research regarding people’s experiences of the module

  • This paper explores how university students experienced being taught and marked by adults with intellectual disabilities.

  • Students’ experiences were generally very positive. They said the module led to more empathy with disabled people and reduced their discomfort around disability

  • At the same time, some aspects of the module, particularly the idea of being marked by adults with intellectual disabilities, made them very nervous.

  • We hope that our research might encourage others to employ adults with intellectual disabilities as university lecturers and markers.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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