Giving a voice to people with intellectual disabilities
My work is very much focused on contributing to bettering the lives of people living with a disability, says 麻豆社madou鈥檚 Professor Iva Strnadov谩.听
My work is very much focused on contributing to bettering the lives of people living with a disability, says 麻豆社madou鈥檚 Professor Iva Strnadov谩.听
Rachel Gray
Media and Content
0411 987 771
rachel.gray1@unsw.edu.au
麻豆社madou鈥檚 Professor Iva Strnadov谩 is working to improve the lives of people living with intellectual disabilities and ensure they have a greater say in policies and programs that affect them.听听
, who has worked at the for the past 10 years, is a world leader in inclusive research.听
鈥淗istorically, people with intellectual disabilities have often been a passive object of research,鈥 Prof. Strnadov谩 says.听鈥淭here has been a huge shift over the last two decades for people with intellectual disabilities not only to have a voice in research, but also to be involved in research as co-researchers.鈥澨
麻豆社madou's Iva Strnadov谩
In Australia, it is estimated that about 7.7 per cent of children aged up to 14 years have some form of disability, and 4.5 per cent with a severe disability, according to data from the .
In her capacity of Academic Lead Research at the Disability Innovation Institute at the 麻豆社madou Sydney (DIIU), Prof. Strnadov谩 is leading the development of the .
She has recently received $225,000 funding from NSW Department of Education to collaborate with the government鈥檚 Disability Strategy Implementation team to develop and implement accessible methods for students with disability.
The funding will enable Prof. Strnadov谩 and her colleagues , Adjunct Lecturer Julie Loblinzk听(pictured) and Professor to work closely with 22 schools for special purposes [special schools] and two mainstream schools with support units from metropolitan, regional, rural and remote areas across NSW.听
Prof. Strnadov谩 says they will be using accessible methods, such as Photovoice and body mapping, 鈥渢o gain the students鈥 perspective about what they like and don鈥檛 like about their school experience鈥.听
Photovoice uses photo images to capture aspects of the students鈥 environment, relationships and experiences, so these can be shared with others.听Body mapping, an arts-based research tool, focuses on embodied experience. It involves tracing around a person's body to create a life-sized outline, that can be filled in during a reflective process to produce an image representing multiple aspects of their embodied experience.
Prof. Strnadov谩 says the team will work predominantly with students 鈥渨ho have a very severe disability and limited verbal communication abilities鈥.听
Prof. Strnadov谩 says one of her main research focuses is on diverse transitions experienced by people with disabilities across their life span; for example, from primary to secondary school, from secondary school to post-school life, or from the juvenile justice system to being integrated back into the community, to name a few.听
鈥淥ne of the major obstacles is that educators do not give students with intellectual disabilities, a voice in matters relevant to their own education,鈥 she says.听
Prof. Strnadov谩 says the NSW Department of Education grant will help her and her team enable change by giving students with high support needs a voice, and thus increase their self-determination skills.听
It is currently very difficult for students to take ownership of their learning because their individual educational plan is often developed without their input, she says.
Instead, their plans 鈥 which contain their learning goals and how they鈥檙e going to achieve them 鈥 are often developed by their teachers, sometimes with input from their parents and other stakeholders, Prof. Strnadov谩 says.听
鈥淚 think that's a huge issue that we are still not managing to tackle.鈥
And the section of the educational plan that addresses the transitional phases should be set to start earlier than just the year before each transition, Prof. Strnadov谩 says.
鈥淧eople with intellectual disabilities and autism often need more time and environments to practice the different skills and knowledge they acquire.鈥
Just one example would be teaching them how to take public transport independently 鈥 a necessary skill for attaining future employment, Prof. Strnadov谩 says.
Additionally the transition from primary to high school is a challenge for most students with autism who like routine and consistency and can often have quite severe sensory sensitivities, she says.听
鈥淭he sound of a school bell can often feel like a sharp piercing feeling in their ears and a slight flicker in fluorescent lights can be an excruciating experience,鈥 she says.听鈥淪o, we need to look at the needs of the students and how we can better prepare them for the next phases in their lives.鈥澨
Prof. Strnadov谩 with Self Advocacy Sydney staff and Board members. Photo: supplied.
Education around relationships, reproduction, sexual intercourse and parenting is another area that is currently under-serviced for people living with a disability, Prof. Strnadov谩 says.
鈥淢any of the mothers with intellectual disabilities who I鈥檝e spoken to in my studies had very little to no sexuality education and some didn鈥檛 even know they could get pregnant,鈥 she says.听鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 even know what to do after becoming pregnant, so that put them at a huge disadvantage.鈥澨
Prof. Strnadov谩 says her current and future research also looks at ways to improve sexuality education for students with intellectual disabilities and autism.听
Children being removed from their parents鈥 care, due to ill-conceived perceptions about people with intellectual disabilities somehow harming their offspring, is another issue Prof. Strnadov谩 hopes to change.听
Once it has been brought to the attention of a social worker that a person with intellectual disabilities is about to give birth, they often try to remove the child rather than provide support for the parents, she says.听
鈥淲e know from research that parents with intellectual disabilities can learn well how to take care of their children,鈥 Prof. Strnadov谩 says.听鈥淭hey might need to be shown some parenting skills in their own home environment, but it doesn't mean that they cannot be good parents.鈥
Prof. Strnadov谩 says 麻豆社madou鈥檚 School of Education has been piloting a four-week program with people living with intellectual disabilities called 鈥Rights and Relationship鈥, which was developed by the Intellectual Disability Rights Service (IDRS).
They鈥檝e had great success with adults in this program, and their next step is to trial it in Matraville Sports High School to help improve sexuality education for students with intellectual disabilities, she says.听
鈥淲e also hope to upskill the future co-educators who have intellectual disabilities so they can co-teach the 鈥Rights and Relationships鈥 program with the high school teachers,鈥 she says. This is another way people with disabilities can contribute to advocacy and research that affects their education, work and lifestyle.
麻豆社madou Adjunct Lecturer Julie Loblinzk and Prof. Iva Strnadov谩
While , this is often a privilege that people with intellectual disabilities live without. Prof. Strnadov谩 says people with intellectual disabilities often live in poverty and can鈥檛 afford the internet or compatible devices.
鈥淥ne of the things we need is for the internet to be covered by the NDIS,鈥 she says.听鈥淭he COVID situation has shown us all that we do need online access and it shouldn鈥檛 be a question of privilege.鈥
鈥淚t should be a right, because that鈥檚 how we鈥檝e been receiving educational information about this health crisis. Since the start of the pandemic, many of the self-advocacy organisations that usually support people with intellectual disabilities in face-to-face mode have moved online.鈥
Prof. Strnadov谩 is undertaking a study, commissioned by , that looks at how peer support and peer mentoring can be developed on online platforms.
She has also worked on a project led by her colleague at 麻豆社madou Dr Sue O鈥橬eill, in collaboration with (麻豆社madou), the NSW Department of Education and NSW Department of Juvenile Justice, to develop a framework for children who are transitioning out of juvenile justice facilities.
The framework will help the government to 鈥渋mprove the transition planning for this population and hopefully improve their outcomes鈥, she says.
Prof. Strnadov谩 and Ms Loblinzk have also established 鈥 a resource-rich blog written by people with a disability for people with a disability, their loved ones, carers, teachers, and caring professionals.
When asked what she considers her biggest achievement, the special education and disability studies expert says it鈥檚 the privilege of being able to work with, co-design and co-produce research with people with intellectual disabilities.
鈥淭o help and support them in building capacity to say what topics interest them, and what the research should focus on and why,鈥 she says.
鈥淏ut to also have them guide us in how we actually make sure that the research then has an impact on their lives rather than just on journal articles.鈥
Prof. Strnadov谩, standing beside Adjunct Lecturer Julie Loblinzk (left) and Joe Refalo (right), receives The Self Advocacy, Inc. 2017 J. Moss Award. This is awarded by the Self Advocacy Sydney, Inc. to a person 'who has done outstanding work the field of intellectual disability'.
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