Abstract

AbstractParents of individuals with dis/abilities often grapple with their child’s dis/ability, as parents mediate their own experiences surrounding dis/ability. This research specifically investigates the literacy narratives in which parents reveal the literacy tools and practices they engaged with and in to aid in forming their own conceptions of dis/ability. Through narrative inquiry, three interviews with parents of children with dis/abilities were analyzed using postconventional perspectives of dis/ability to highlight the destabilization and multifaceted nature of dis/ability and the dis/ability experience. Findings drawn from parents’ literacy narratives suggest that parents have literacy experiences that stretch well beyond themselves and their immediate families and into the larger dis/ability community. Implications show that more pedagogical and communal resources are needed to support parents within the dis/ability community, as they search for ways to connect with others for emotional and educational purposes.

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