Inclusion
Neurodiversity
Diversity vs Inclusion
Stereotypes
Disability
100

What is inclusion?

Inclusion can be defined as the act of ensuring that all individuals feel genuinely accepted.

100

What is Neurodiversity?

Neurodiversity is the idea that neurological differences, like autism, ADHD, or dyslexia, are natural variations of the human brain, not flaws.

100

What is the difference between diversity and inclusion?

  • Diversity: Who's there.
  • Inclusion: Everyone belongs.
100

What are stereotypes?

A stereotype is a simple, often unfair, idea about a group of people.

100

What is a disability?

A disability is any condition that makes it harder for a person to do certain activities or fully participate in society. It can affect their body or mind.

200

Why is inclusion important

Inclusion matters because it makes everyone feel like they belong and are appreciated.

200
How can we help people avoid being discriminated against due to neurodiversity?
Don't be a bystander, be an upstander.
200

Why is diversity important?

Diversity is important because it brings different people and ideas together, leading to creativity, understanding, and a stronger society.

200
Why are stereotypes bad?

Stereotypes are bad because they're unfair, leading to prejudice and limiting people's opportunities based on untrue assumptions.


200

Why is a disability okay?

Disability is okay. It's part of someone. It helps them get support. It makes society better .Disabled people deserve respect.

300

Should you involve people in any activity they want to join?

Mostly yes.

300

What percent of Neurodiversity is invisible?

90%

300

Why is understanding diversity and inclusion crucial?

Understanding diversity and inclusion is super important because it makes sure everyone feels valued and has a fair chance. When we respect each other's differences and include everyone, we get new ideas, solve problems better, and create a friendlier world for all!

300

How do people with neurodiverse abilities get stereotyped?

People with neurodiversity often face stereotypes that don't recognize their individual strengths and challenges. Common misconceptions include thinking of neurodiversity as a disorder instead of a natural difference, assuming all neurodiverse individuals are the same, believing they can't succeed, and relying on simplified portrayals in movies and TV. These stereotypes are often misleading and don't reflect the reality of neurodiverse people's abilities.

300
How can a disability affect somebody's life?

People with disabilities (PWDs) face unique challenges, including accessibility barriers, limited employment and education opportunities, social exclusion, mental health issues, strained relationships, difficulty maintaining independence, financial instability, and healthcare access problems.

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