Held on 18th and 19th June 2015 at The Open University, Milton Keynes
Introduction
Professor Jan Walmsley
In this opening address, I propose to review the role life stories and life histories have played in the 21 year history of the Social History of Learning Disability Research Group, with the help of the World Premiere of the late Mabel Cooper’s film.
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Gertraud Kremsner and Benjamin Emberger
In this paper we want to talk about first results from a study currently conducted in Vienna/Austria. It is called "Experiences with personal and institutional structures in the biographies of people with learning difficulties".
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My Life, My Choice
Funding from the Heritage Lottery recently helped us to produce a short user-led film called "Speaking up, speaking out, and speaking easy – a history self-advocacy for people with learning disabilities in Oxfordshire."
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Godfred Boahen
In this paper I tell the life story of a young Greek man called Abrax who was involved in research I conducted and was labelled as 'learning disabled' at the time.
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Rachel Barker, Emily Moorhouse, Vicky Ackroyd and Helen Atherton
Purple Patch Arts is an organisation based in Bradford. They work to improve the lives and life chances of people with learning disabilities by delivering inclusive arts education across the Yorkshire region.
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Between 2pm and 3pm, people can choose to attend a workshop or to listen to presentations. Each workshop will be limited to 12 participants, booked at Conference registration.
Debbie Race
My sister and my son, they were both born with Down’s Syndrome.
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Deborah Phillips
This presentation stems from a recent personal experience when I received a 'return to sender' card.
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Workshops
Workshop 1 - Towards good practice
Towards good practice: how people with profound and multiple learning disabilities are living good lives and sharing their stories
(Noelle McCormack, Catherine and Johanna de Haas)
(Chaired by Sue Ledger)
Workshop 2 - The ethics of life story work
The ethics of life story work
(Liz Tilley)
A bad experience
(Angela Still)
(Chaired by Janet Bardsley)
Workshop 3 - Telling life stories
From project hunter to Raspberry pi: a snapshot of a teenager's life story through his schooling experience
(The Woodbine Group, Tom Smith and Hilra Vinha)
(Chaired by Nigel Ingham)
Dr Michelle Proyer
I collected two life stories in Thailand. One story of a mother of a daughter with a learning disability and one of a father of a daughter with learning disability. The stories were told in Thai.
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Building Bridges Training
Building Bridges research group is an inclusive research group of people with a learning disability who live in the West Midlands. Most people have no support from services, and a couple have just a little tenancy support.
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Introduction
Nicola Grove and Robin Meader
The ability to share stories about what has happened in our everyday lives is one of the most important communication skills that children can develop.
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Simon Jarrett
Life stories help people to belong, because they enable individuals to be heard and understood as a fully-rounded human, rather than be labelled in a particular way by those who know nothing about them.
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Paul Hunt
The Hidden Now Heard project is collecting the oral histories of people with a learning disability and staff from six former long-stay hospitals across Wales.
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Larry O'Bryan and friends
In 2003, at the age of 58, Larry O'Bryan emigrated from Bath in Avon, UK, to live in Kilrush, Co. Clare in the west of Ireland.
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Zoe Hughes
There have been lots of projects around the world where people with disabilities have told their stories. These stories are interesting and important. But what is it actually like to tell your story?
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Between 2pm and 3pm, people can choose to attend a workshop or to listen to presentations. Each workshop will be limited to 12 participants, booked at Conference registration.
Michael Shamash
My name is Michael Shamash and I am a freelance researcher with ties to Middlesex University and the University of Bedfordshire.
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Alison Pointu
People with learning disabilities are living to a much older age.
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Workshop 1 - Towards good practice
Towards good practice: how people with profound and multiple learning disabilities are living good lives and sharing their stories
(Noelle McCormack, Catherine and Johanna de Haas
(Chaired by Sue Ledger)
Workshop 2 - Be your own adventure
Be your own adventure: hero tales in everyday life
(Nicola Grove and Robin Meade, open story tellers)
Changing Scenes (Oxfordshire Older Carers)
'Defining moments' tells the life stories of three families from the point of view of family carers.
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Sue Ledger, Vicky Green and Nigel Ingham
Three universities and two self-advocacy groups have been given money to work together. The project is to put people with learning disabilities at the centre of recording and telling their own history.
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Jan Walmsley
If you woud like to get in touch with the Social History of Learning Disability (SHLD) Research Group, please contact:
Liz Tilley
Chair of the Social History of Learning Disability (SHLD) Research Group
School of Health, Wellbeing and Social Care
Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
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