Weeks 1-5
Weeks 1-5
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
100
The number of forms of reasoning introduced by Mattingly & Fleming (1994).
What is 4?
100
Mattingly & Fleming (1994) found that OTs view their patients and illness experiences using these two approaches.
What are Biomechanical & Phenomenological
100
This mode of reasoning was employed when therapists wanted to understand the particular needs and experiences of the patient
What is interactive reasoning?
100
The number of assumptions of the law's analysis of difference according to Minow.
What is 5?
100
According to Minow (1990), this approach asserts that difference is located within a person’s basic nature, and this is how people are categorized as “normal” or “abnormal”.
What is the abnormal-persons approach?
200
According to Mattingly & Fleming, this is the meaning that disability takes on for a particular patient
What is the "illness experience"?
200
The biomedical way of describing the body that downplays the experience of the patient
What is "Chart talk"
200
This reasoning strategy was most commonly used by novice therapists until they are more confident in their abilities.
What is procedural reasoning?
200
TRUE or FALSE. Jackson (2000) states that work climates and cultures can be invisible to the people who create/perpetuate them
What is true?
200
This approach states that differences are understood as statements of relationships.
What is the social-relations approach?
300
Lawlor & Mattingly (1998) define this as the events that occur during practice sessions that create a discord between what therapists believe should happen and what they actually experience
What is "daily dilemmas of practice"?
300
The language of personal experience that considers the meaning of the disability for a patient's life.
What is Story Talk?
300
This is used to describe the phenomenon of therapists addressing issues related to the patient's illness experience but did not document them.
What is the underground practice?
300
This policy states that “all individuals, regardless of ethnicity, race, age, religion, gender, and sexual orientation or disability should be able to be a part of the naturally occurring activities of society”.
What is AOTA's policy on full inclusion
300
This approach states that legal rights apply to everyone, but still assumes and unstated idea of normal.
What is the rights-analysis approach?
400
Lawlor and Mattingly (1998) found that practitioners defined this "______" as outcomes that could be quantified and measured.
What is "real treatment"?
400
This culture explains the relationship of the body to the individual's social modes of operating in the world
What is lived body?
400
This dilemma occurs when therapists are addressing their client's issues at a level that is beyond their expertise/experience.
What is the depth dilemma?
400
The dilemma that occurs when problems arise from a culture that condemns inequalities and at the same time perpetuates them.
What is the dilemma of difference?
400
Bogdan and Taylor (1989) found that nondisabled people who had a disabled partner assumed that this view was possessed by disabled people.
What is humanness?
500
The forms of reasoning introduced by Mattingly & Fleming (1994).
What is procedural, interactive, conditional, and narrative?
500
This culture evolved from the Western notion of the body as distinct from the mind
What is body as machine?
500
This principle represents a fundamental commitment to the equality of all persons no matter what their condition.
What is the right to life or sanctity of life principle?
500
According to Kielhofner (2005) these are 2 themes represented in both disability studies and occupational therapy.
What is client-centered practice and full participation for people with disabilities?
500
These are ways therapists can learn to better understand the experience of disability
What is (1) reflecting on how your own narrative might bias listening to others' narratives (2) reading 1st person accounts about disability (3) watching films and reflecting on one's preconceived biases