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8 pages in length. The stares – almost involuntary and quite palpable – become part of everyday life. The poorly concealed whispers are nearly always followed by accusatorily pointed fingers and expressions of muted scorn. Those who are able to overcome the obvious stigma-induced reaction to seeing someone in a wheelchair often go overboard in the opposite direction by being overly friendly, overly accommodating and overly obvious with their discomfort. What happens when such people spend twenty-four wheelchair-bound hours in order to gain a better understanding of the meaning of disability? Indeed, their levels of compassion, realization and reflection reach far beyond their previously small scope, and they are left with a tremendous appreciation for the way in which a disabled person feels on the receiving end of society's stigma-induced behavior. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCLearnDis.rtf
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pointed fingers and expressions of muted scorn. Those who are able to overcome the obvious stigma-induced reaction to seeing someone in a wheelchair often go overboard in the opposite
direction by being overly friendly, overly accommodating and overly obvious with their discomfort. What happens when such people spend twenty-four wheelchair-bound hours in order to gain a better understanding
of the meaning of disability? Indeed, their levels of compassion, realization and reflection reach far beyond their previously small scope, and they are left with a tremendous appreciation for
the way in which a disabled person feels on the receiving end of societys stigma-induced behavior. II. ANCHORING SOCIOLOGICAL CONCEPT: STIGMA Virtually no subgroup of society is left untouched
by the behavior induced by stigma. While ethnicity, gender and age represent some of the factions routinely discriminated against, the disabled population is by far one of the most
stigmatized factions of a highly critical and unforgiving global community. Human nature is defined by myriad elements, not the least of which is the social need to categorize people
into distinct groupings based upon certain criteria (Davis, 1961). These innate classifications can represent significant social power, as in the case of beauty, wealth and status, or they can
symbolize aspects of society that people would just as soon forget, such as with physical disability. For the wheelchair-bound individual to become able to fully function within a society
that expects perfection from those who least possess it, the presence of myriad internal and external considerations reflect an incommodious shield of social intolerance (Cahill et al, 1995).
The concept of a rational society - in which the entire community is greatly influenced by principles its members completely and accept without challenge -
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