Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Note on the Authors -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1 Personal Narratives as an Extension of Uyghur Advocacy Work -- Part 2 The Narratives -- 1 Zubayra Shamseden -- 2 Rushan Abbas -- 3 Rahima Mahmut -- 4 Rukiye Turdush -- 5 Arzu Gul -- 6 Raziya Mahmut -- 7 Gulchehra Hoja -- 8 Dilnur Reyhan -- 9 Zumrat Dawut -- 10 Mihrigul Tursun -- Part 3 Restorying a Genocide -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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Chapter 1: Quebec's New Religions in Social and Historical Context -- Chapter 2: New Religious Studies in Quebec since 1944: A Literature Review -- Chapter 3: The Army of Mary: Quebec Nationalism and Catholic Heterodoxy -- Chapter 4: The Pilgrims of Saint Michael: Preserving Quebec's Traditional "Intégriste" Catholicism -- Chapter 5: La Mission de l'Esprit Saint and Quebec's Holy Spirit Incarnate -- Chapter 6: Dr. Henry Morgentaler, "Arch-Abortionist" and Humanist: An Unbeliever's Pro-Choice Campaign in Quebec and Canada -- Chapter 7: The Temple of Priapus: Contemporary Phallus Worshippers in Montreal -- Chapter 8: The Christian Essene Church: Freedom of Religion in the "Land of the Maple" -- Chapter 9: The Apostles of Infinite Love and the "Hidden Children of St Jovite" -- Chapter 10: The Solar Temple in Quebec and the Saint-Casimir "Transit" -- Chapter 11: Roch Theriault and the Holy Moses Mountain Family ("Ant Hill Kids").
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This study investigated the effects of the Self-Determined Learning Model of Instruction (SDLMI) on the academic skill performance of three junior high school students with moderate to severe intellectual disabilities. The academic skills taught were aligned to the district general curriculum, and extended benchmarks were individually determined. The students were instructed to engage in a self-regulated problem-solving strategy, as well as to use one or more additional student-directed learning strategies. The results suggested that all students were able to acquire and maintain target academic skills to mastery levels. Also, all stakeholders had positive perceptions about the value of such instruction. The implications of these findings relative to the general curriculum initiative are discussed.
Individuals with severe disabilities and their families can engage in person-centered and family-centered planning for aging using a life course view. Viewing aging within the context of the family and disability is essential because many people with severe disabilities depend on their families for supports in daily living, social relationships, and for activities within communities. Since eligibility-based supports are often limited, parents and other family members play large roles both financially and socially in helping their family member move through the life course into active and healthy aging. Charting the LifeCourse is a framework that both people with disabilities and their families can use to achieve desired life outcomes over time. Issues that impact active and healthy aging for people with disabilities include the aging of caregivers, death of a caregiver, limited resources for supporting physical and health concerns, staying active in the community following retirement, and maintaining social emotional connections.
Previous research has suggested differences in the locus of control (LOC) orientations of students with intellectual disability, learning disabilities, and no disabilities, although this research has been characterized by methodological limitations. The purpose of this study was to examine the development of LOC orientations in students with intellectual disability, learning disabilities, and no disabilities using an accelerated design and a curve-of-factors modeling framework. Participants were 1,344 children and young people between the ages of 8 and 18 years who completed two measures of LOC orientations. Students with intellectual disability, at 8 years, tend to be more externally oriented than their peers with learning disabilities and no disabilities, and from 8 to 20 years, they do not significantly increase or decrease in their perceptions of their ability to exert control over their lives. Students with learning disabilities and no disabilities tend to develop more positive orientations as they age; however, this similar pattern of change was offset by initial differences in level (i.e., intercept values). The findings suggest the critical need for continued attention to developing and implementing strategies that focus on promoting the development of adaptive perceptions of control in students with disabilities, particularly students with more severe disabilities.
Research has suggested that adding cognitive support technologies to the transition planning process enhances student self-determination above and beyond traditional, book or paper-based self-determination curricular materials. However, limited research has examined how teachers perceive the impact of cognitive support technologies on student capacity and opportunity for self-determination. The present study used multivariate analysis of covariance to examine teacher perceptions of student capacity and opportunity for self-determination over time based on group random assignment to a self-determination curricula alone group or a self-determination curricula plus cognitive support technology group. The impact of disability label (learning disability vs. intellectual disability) on educator perceptions was also examined. Findings suggest a complex pattern of differences over time; there was a multivariate effect for the interaction of time, disability, and technology access, but when decomposing these differences at the univariate level, the primary differences were in educator ratings of capacity, not opportunity. Differences based on disability label were also found, with educators rating students with intellectual disability significantly lower in their capacity for self-determination, but not opportunity. Implications for future research and practice are discussed.