Five Valued Experiences:
All citizens have better life chances, and everyone’s world grows more
interesting, when communities offer rich opportunities for people to
have these five valued experiences:
Belonging in a diverse variety of relationships and memberships.
Being respected as whole persons whose history, capacities and
futures are worthy of attention and whose gifts engage them in valued
social roles.
Sharing ordinary places and activities with other citizens, neighbors,
classmates, and co-workers. Living, working, learning, and playing confidently
in ordinary community settings.
Contributing by discovering, developing, and giving their gifts and
investing their capacities and energy in pursuits that make a positive
difference to other people. There are gifts of being and gifts of doing:
contributions can include interested presence as well as capable performance.
Contributions may be freely exchanged or earn pay.
Choosing what they want in everyday situations in ways that reflect
their highest purpose. Having the freedom, support, information, and
assistance to make the same choices as others of a similar age and
learning to make wiser choices over time. Being encouraged to use and
strengthen voice regardless of mode of communication, clarify what really
matters, make thoughtful decisions, and learn from experience.
Five Community Tasks:
The quest to act in ways that offer more of these five interrelated experiences
builds a more competent community. Healthy communities work
to notice and overcome us and them thinking by exercising social creativity
in doing these five community tasks.
Promoting interdependence by valuing and investing in the social ties
and associations that promote trust , encourage mutual support, and
energize collaboration.
Living inclusive stories by opening valued social roles to people who
have been excluded by prejudice, stereotyped expectations, and poorly
designed opportunities and by celebrating the benefits of diversity.
Practicing hospitality by making ordinary places acceptable and welcoming
and finding effective ways to adapt to and accommodate differences
that might otherwise keep people out.
Seeing and supporting capacities by adopting the practice of using
what the community has to get more of what it really needs, looking
first at community assets and what people can contribute rather than
getting stuck on what is missing or scarce.
Resolving conflicts in fair and creative ways. When people whose voices
have been missing begin to speak up about their interests and concerns,
new problems come up about who has power and how it will be
used. Healthy communities avoid escaping into withdrawal exclusion or
violence and find ways to work together and find ways that more people
can stay involved and get more of what really matters to them.
Dimensions of Inclusion
History shows that people with disabilities are vulnerable to isolation,
wasted capacities, and excessive external control. Common practices in
the world of services too often force people to live in a box that limits
their opportunities for valued experiences in order to get the assistance
that they need.
Segregation at the margins of community life, which decreases the
chances of building a more diverse community.
Stereotypes that stick people into a narrow range of social roles that
reinforce stories of incompetence, unworthiness, unacceptability, and
passivity.
Congregation: involuntarily grouping people together in special, separate
groups based on their professionally applied label.
Poor support because of unrealistically low expectations, technical
incompetence, or lack of imagination and creativity.
External control that deprives people of choices because of a low level
of individualization or a reflex response to vulnerability.
Service workers who want to assist people with disabilities to get or
keep out of the box have to build alliances that are strong enough and
plans that are imaginative enough to energize creative action that
opens pathways for people’s energy, capacities, and gifts to flow into
community life. They continue to improve the quality of their answers
to the questions that define five accomplishments.
How can we assist people to make and sustain connections, memberships
and friendships? Service workers make a difference when they listen
deeply and act thoughtfully to provide exactly what a person needs
to build a bridge to community participation.
How do we enhance people’s reputation? Respect comes to those who
play recognizable and valued parts in everyday life. Service workers
make a difference when they support people to identify and take up
social roles that express their interests and provide needed assistance
with negotiating the accommodations they need to be successful and
so encourage valued social roles.
How do we increase people’s active involvement in the life of our communities?
Service workers make a difference when they assist people
to make the most of the ordinary community settings that attract their
interest and energy. This increases community presence.
How do we assist people to develop and invest their gifts and capacities?
Service workers make a difference when they focus on what each
person can bring to others and bring imagination and technical competence
to designing and delivering the help each person needs to develop
competency.
How do we increase choice and control in their lives? Service workers
make a difference when they honor people’s rights and responsibilities
and offer what works to promote their autonomy.
John O’Brien
Inclusion Press ©2011