Resilience processes supporting adolescents with intellectual disability: a multiple case study
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Hall, Anna-Marié
Theron, Linda Carol
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American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD)
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Resilience, or the process of adjusting well to risk, relies on constructive collaboration between youths and their social ecologies. Although the literature details the risks of an intellectual disability (ID), there is little explanation of why some young people cope well despite these risks. Accordingly, we report a multiple case study that affords insight into the resilience of 24 adolescents with ID. Using a draw-and-talk methodology, these young people explained their resilience as enabled primarily by supportive social ecologies (which facilitated behavioral and emotional regulation, encouraged mastery, treated them as agentic beings, and offered safe spaces). Adolescents' positive orientation to their life-worlds co-facilitated their resilience. These insights advance effective ways to champion the resilience of young people with ID.
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Hall, A-M. & Theron, L.C. 2016. Resilience processes supporting adolescents with intellectual disability: a multiple case study. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 54(1):45-62. [https://doi.org/10.1352/1934-9556-54.1.45]
