¶ … Handicapped:' a substitute word or phrase that communicates a more positive attitude toward people with disabilities The difficulties we have in talking about people with disabilities are not simply failures of language. They also reflect the difficulties exhibited by members of our society in terms of thinking about what it means to be disabled. As noted in the essay "What's in a name: The use of first person language," author Scott Modell notes that we would not speak of someone with classes as a 'glasses-wearing friend' or a 'hearing-aid wearing friend' but we often speak of a disabled child as a blind child or a deaf child. This suggests that when someone has a disability, we have a tendency as a society to reduce that person to the status of his or her disability, rather than see the person simply as a unique individual. Everyone has, within his or her character, certain differences and...
However, certain qualities known as 'disabilities' have been given additional prominence and are often used to single out certain students within the school system in a negative fashion.
disabilities as 'deficits.' Even though I did not harbor prejudices against the disabled or regard people who had disabilities as 'inferior,' I viewed disabilities as challenges that had to be overcome. This class has helped me see persons with disabilities as people with particular conditions or differences, not as people defined by a singular characteristic. Everyone has personal deficits and strengths, but needing 'talking books' to read a book
Jesus' Teachings, Prayer, & Christian Life "He (Jesus) Took the Bread. Giving Thanks Broke it. And gave it to his Disciples, saying, 'This is my Body, which is given to you.'" At Elevation time, during Catholic Mass, the priest establishes a mandate for Christian Living. Historically, at the Last Supper, Christ used bread and wine as a supreme metaphor for the rest of our lives. Jesus was in turmoil. He was
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