CLASDISA – Classifi cations of Disabilities in the Field of Education in Different Societal and Cultural Contexts: Insights Into the Current State of Research ASEAS 4(1) 158 159 Forschungswerkstatt / Research Workshop CLASDISA – Classifi cations of Disabilities in the Field of Education in Diff erent Societal and Cultural Contexts: Insights Into the Current State of Research Michelle Proyer1, Margarita Schiemer2 & Mikael Luciak3 University of Vienna, Austria Citation Proyer, M., Schiemer, M., & Luciak, M. (2011). CLASDISA – Classifications of Disabilities in the Field of Education in Different Societal and Cultural Contexts: Insights Into the Current State of Research. ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, 4(1), 158-165. The research project Classifications of Disabilities in the Field of Education (CLASDISA) investigates which environmental factors facilitate or restrict activity and partici- pation of 8- to 12-year-old children with disabilities4 in the field of education in dif- ferent societal and cultural contexts. The following report about this international research project provides insights into the research design, the first phase of field research, and the projects’ current progress with an emphasis on research activi- ties in Thailand. Given that previous research pertaining to education and disability in Thailand has been rather unsystematic and fragmentary, particularly qualitative research (Cheausuwantavee, Nookaew, & Cheausuwantavee, 2010), this study aims 1 Michelle Proyer studied Education in Vienna and Berlin. She is assistant professor (Universitätsassistentin) at the Department of Education (Research Unit Special Needs and Inclusive Education), University of Vienna, Austria and member of the ASEAS Editorial Board. Currently, she is working on her PhD thesis in the area of comparative special needs education within the CLASDISA project with a focus on Thailand. Contact: michelle.proyer@univie.ac.at 2 Margarita Schiemer studied Education in Vienna and Amsterdam and Global Studies in Vienna and Sydney. She is assistant professor (Universitätsassistentin) at the Department of Education (Research Unit Special Needs and Inclusive Education), University of Vienna, Austria. She has spent several months in Mozambique in the course of an HIV- AIDS project initiated by the Austrian Development Agency. Currently, she is working on her PhD thesis in the area of comparative special needs education within the CLASDISA project with a focus on Ethiopia. Contact: margarita. schiemer@univie.ac.at 3 Mikael Luciak studied Education in Vienna, Counseling at San Francisco State University, and Social and Cultural Studies in Education at UC Berkeley. He held positions as assistant professor (Universitätsassistent) at the Vienna University of Economics and the University of Vienna and currently is a post-doc researcher at the Department of Education (Research Unit Special Needs and Inclusive Education), University of Vienna, Austria and a board member of the International Association for Intercultural Education (IAIE). His research focuses on the schooling of migrants and ethnic minorities in comparative perspective, inclusive education and equity, as well as disability studies. Contact: mikael.luciak@univie.ac.at 4 Deviations due to severe disabilities or late schooling of children might occur within the sample. d o i 10 .4 23 2 /1 0. A SE A S -4 .1 -1 0 ASEAS 4(1) 158 159 to identify and describe factors that are influencing children with disabilities in Thai- land’s capital more thoroughly. Background of the Project and Research Focus How disability is conceptualised and defined differs over time and varies in different societal and cultural contexts. Classifications and their underlying models of disabil- ity have implications for professional practice and support systems, and determine political decision-making processes, legislation, and policies. Underlying assump- tions about what constitutes a disability have important consequences in the field of education. Thus, the daily lives of people with disabilities, if and how they are educated, if and where they work, and their social and familial life, in large part are determined by models of disability. Perhaps, most impor- tant, models of disability exert a powerful influence on the public perception of disability and the public’s response to people with disabilities. (Smart, 2009, p. 3) The International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF) is based on a biopsychosocial model of disability. Thus, disability is not just regarded as a medi- cal condition of the individual in need of treatment and rehabilitation, but also as a social phenomenon. Contextual factors, such as the physical environment and atti- tudes towards people with a disability, play an important role. This is illustrated in Figure 1. Based on the Inter- national Classification of Functioning Disabil- ity and Health, Children and Youth Version (ICF- Health Condition (Disorder or Disease) Body Functions & Structure ParticipationActivity Environmental Factors Personal Factors Source: WHO, 2001, p.16 Figure 1: Framework of the ICF Michelle Proyer, Margarita Schiemer, & Mikael Luciak - CLASDISA: Classifications of Disabilities ASEAS 4(1) 160 161 CY), which was released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2007, the CLAS- DISA researchers address barriers and facilitators for activity and participation of children with disabilities at schools in the capitals of Austria, Ethiopia, and Thailand. The rationale for choosing the different countries is based on their varied cultural and societal contexts (different religions, values, beliefs, and institutional and struc- tural factors) as well as varied economic and developmental backgrounds (according to the Human Development Index). The decision to select these three countries was also based on already existing contacts to respective Special Needs Departments and the prospect of efficient cooperation. Following two years of preparation, the research proposal for the project was rated as excellent in the course of the Austrian Science Fund’s (FWF, project number P22178) review process, which in turn led to three years of financial funding. The re- search project started in February 2010 and will end in January 2013. A team of three researchers from the University of Vienna conducted the first phase of field research. Each focused on one of the capital cities and was support- ed by research assistants in Thailand and in Ethiopia. Besides cooperation with lo- cal scientific teams from the Department of Special Education at Srinakharinwirot University in Bangkok and from the Department of Special Needs Education at the University of Addis Ababa, two experts in the field of special needs education, Lani Florian from the University of Aberdeen and Judith Hollenweger from the School of Education at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences, support the research proc- ess. Research workshops will be held after each phase of field research involving all researchers associated with the project. Methodological Framework The empirical data for this study will be collected in the course of two phases of field research, lasting three months each, and undertaken simultaneously in the three capitals: Bangkok, Addis Ababa, and Vienna. Data collection is supposed to result in a sample of 16 ‘cases’, each case consisting of one child, one parent/legal guardian/ (primary) caretaker and one teacher. The children’s disabilities must be allocated to one of the following disability categories: ASEAS 4(1) 160 161 1. Visual disability 2. Auditive disability 3. Physical disability 4. Intellectual disability By using a mixed-methods approach (Creswell & Clark, 2007), qualitative research based on grounded theory (Glaser & Strauss, 1967) is complemented by data gained quantitatively (i.e. questionnaires for parents and teachers). The development of re- search instruments draws on the ICF-CY’s chapter on environmental factors. The ICF- CY is a coding instrument that is supposed to be universally applicable, a claim that is at times challenged by researchers (Üstün et al., 2001). The unit of classification is, therefore, categories within health and health-related domains. It is impor- tant to note, therefore, that in ICF persons are not the units of classification; that is ICF does not clas- sify people, but describes the situation of each person within an array of health and or health-related domains. (WHO, 2007, p. 8) Several authors have stressed the relevance of the ICF-CY regarding classifications of disability (Florian & McLaughlin, 2008). Based on the ICF-CY and assumptions about what affects activity and participation, the researchers developed interview and ob- servation guidelines as well as questionnaires for the first phase of field research. Through interviewing children, teachers, and parents, the researchers aim to gain insight into micro-, meso-, and macro-systems affecting children with disabilities in terms of their educational biographies, including the societal and cultural conditions they are confronted with. Furthermore, the project includes three innovative aspects. First, the research project investigates relations between society, culture, disability, and education. Sec- ond, it is applying the ICF-CY in the field of education, including a critical examination of this classification system. Finally, during the research process, adequate research methods are developed through international scientific cooperation in the field of special needs education. The latter includes the development of adapted methods for interviewing children with disabilities. Aside from interim and final project reports, the research is intended to result in four doctoral theses, three focusing on the individual countries, as well as one in Michelle Proyer, Margarita Schiemer, & Mikael Luciak - CLASDISA: Classifications of Disabilities ASEAS 4(1) 162 163 which quantitative results are to be summarised and compared. Current Localisation The development of instruments for qualitative and quantitative data collection was complicated by the language diversity in each of the societal and school contexts. Questions regarding quality assurance arose while the intended research instru- ments initially had to be translated from German into three other languages (English, Thai, Amharic). The research team in Vienna developed instruments in German and translated them, with support of a native speaker, into English. The research teams in Thailand and Ethiopia translated the questionnaires, interview guidelines, and in- formational materials from English into Thai and Amharic. This step was followed by retranslation (from Thai and Amharic into English) by professionals in order to ensure quality and consistency (van de Vijver & Hambleton, 1996). Overall, these linguistic issues pose substantial challenges for the development of research instruments and research implementation as well as for the process of data analysis. After the pre-testing phase, the first phase of field research took place in Thailand, in Ethiopia, and in Austria. Currently, qualitative interviews are being translated and qualitative data from the three countries are being prepared for computer-based analysis. The processing of quantitative data, which was collected during the first phase of field research, is nearly completed. In addition, a methodological framework as well as research instruments for the second phase of field research are being devel- oped. Source: Authors Figure 2: Methodological Framework - 3 Phases of Research 1st Phase of Field Research November 2010 - January 2011 Pre- Testing March - June 2010 November 2011 - January 2012 2nd Phase of Field Research ASEAS 4(1) 162 163 Reflections on Research in Bangkok The research team in Thailand established initial contacts with schools and organisa- tions during a visit to Bangkok in June and July 2010. In Bangkok, almost all of the tar- geted schools and institutions offered support and showed interest in the research and its findings, even though the framework of the study, to many of the experts and parents involved, appeared highly complex. Only two institutions postponed or denied cooperation. Overall, 92 interviews were conducted and 124 questionnaires were collected at 15 institutions during the first phase of field research between No- vember 2010 and January 2011. The local partners’ support in regard to interviewing, translating, and organisational tasks was very helpful. Researchers observed a tendency that teachers expected them to interview either the least disabled or best students in their classrooms. The relevance of targeting a wide variety of children including those with severe disabilities had to be explained several times. Interviewing children with a wide range of disabilities and filling in a complex questionnaire with parents, who are in part nearly illiterate, posed particu- lar challenges. This led to discussions within the research team in Thailand as well as with colleagues working in Ethiopia and in Austria. It appeared that the time and resources for filling in questionnaires had been underestimated, given that nearly half of the parents needed support due to either not understanding the questions or to limited reading or writing skills. During the first phase of field research most participants spoke and understood Central Thai or a close dialect. However, occasionally a sign language interpreter supported the research team in Thailand. Starting mid-November 2011, the research team aims to interview as many of the persons as possible who had already par- ticipated in the first field research phase for a second time. Also, interviews with additional experts and more observations in classrooms are planned. Questions for this second phase will be developed based on data analysis of the first round of data collection. It will be further investigated and discussed whether research materials might need to be translated into other languages apart from Thai and English (such as those of migrant workers). Only broad indications relating to further research foci can be given at this stage of the research process. Since the analysis of the data has not been completed, it is Michelle Proyer, Margarita Schiemer, & Mikael Luciak - CLASDISA: Classifications of Disabilities ASEAS 4(1) 164 165 inherent in the methodology of grounded theory that researchers avoid premature conclusions and progressively generate new theoretical concepts and insights (Char- maz, 2006). Still, an initial assessment of the empirical data at hand implies that, among other issues, the relevance of religion and belief in a transitory society (Taylor, 2003) and their impact on understanding disability and attitudes towards people with disabilities (Miles, 2002) needs to be explored in-depth. For example, data from the first phase of field research in Thailand suggests that almost all parents interviewed sought counselling or support from monks or institutions of worship at some stage during their child’s development. 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