| Call Number | 00600 | 
|---|---|
| Day & Time Location | R 2:10pm-4:00pm 318 Milbank Hall (Barnard) | 
| Points | 4 | 
| Grading Mode | Standard | 
| Approvals Required | None | 
| Instructor | Erica Musser | 
| Type | SEMINAR | 
| Course Description | The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the history of disability as a construct, as well as major models of disability. Both medical and social models (as well as others) will be examined across each of the major neurodevelopmental disabilities explored, including: ADHD, autism, intellectual disability, specific learning disability, and communication/language/speech and motor disabilities. We will examine the ways in which disability is rooted in disparities associated with power and resources, political rights, and social status. We will also utilize an intersectional lens in approaching disability to examine intersections with class, ethnicity, gender, race, sexuality, and more. For each disability, we will examine cultural, historical, and socio-political context; diagnostic criteria; epidemiology; etiology; assessment; and interventions/common accommodations. For each disability, we will also engage with several first-person, lived experience accounts and attempt to identify links to the different models and theories of disability, as well as theories of intersectionality. | 
| Web Site | Vergil | 
| Department | Psychology @Barnard | 
| Enrollment | 14 students (16 max) as of 5:06PM Friday, October 31, 2025 | 
| Subject | Psychology | 
| Number | BC3393 | 
| Section | 001 | 
| Division | Barnard College | 
| Section key | 20253PSYC3393X001 |