
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Author Catherine Tan discusses her article, "'Two Opposite Ends of the World': The Management of Uncertainty in an Autism-Only School," which she and co-author Gil Eyal recently published in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography.
Abstract: How do individuals maintain a sense of efficacy and purpose in the face of high levels of ambiguity and uncertainty? In research on medical uncertainty, sociologists often discuss the strategies health practitioners employ to control uncertainties relating to diagnosis and treatment. Over six months of ethnographic field work at an autism-only therapy school, we observed seventy-five students and forty-seven instructors and formally interviewed ten instructors and four parents. While other studies on medical uncertainty have focused on controls over external circumstances, we demonstrate that another management strategy is for individuals to perform ethical work on themselves in order to adjust how they conduct themselves in uncertain situations. Despite the ambiguity of both the autism diagnosis and the therapeutic method employed at the school, instructors are able to maintain a sense of efficacy and to recognize themselves as “doing floortime” by transforming themselves to become “child directed.”
Read the article here.
By Sage Publications4.2
2020 ratings
Author Catherine Tan discusses her article, "'Two Opposite Ends of the World': The Management of Uncertainty in an Autism-Only School," which she and co-author Gil Eyal recently published in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography.
Abstract: How do individuals maintain a sense of efficacy and purpose in the face of high levels of ambiguity and uncertainty? In research on medical uncertainty, sociologists often discuss the strategies health practitioners employ to control uncertainties relating to diagnosis and treatment. Over six months of ethnographic field work at an autism-only therapy school, we observed seventy-five students and forty-seven instructors and formally interviewed ten instructors and four parents. While other studies on medical uncertainty have focused on controls over external circumstances, we demonstrate that another management strategy is for individuals to perform ethical work on themselves in order to adjust how they conduct themselves in uncertain situations. Despite the ambiguity of both the autism diagnosis and the therapeutic method employed at the school, instructors are able to maintain a sense of efficacy and to recognize themselves as “doing floortime” by transforming themselves to become “child directed.”
Read the article here.

22,014 Listeners

32,090 Listeners

43,567 Listeners

7,689 Listeners

289 Listeners

289 Listeners

1,820 Listeners

46 Listeners

21 Listeners

7 Listeners

1,825 Listeners

3 Listeners

12 Listeners

8 Listeners

17 Listeners

3 Listeners

2 Listeners

4 Listeners

428 Listeners

54 Listeners

6,355 Listeners

6,389 Listeners

2,107 Listeners

410 Listeners