FALL
2007 HONORS COURSES
HONR 248H From Willowbrook to
Attica: Delinquency in the Context of Disability
Monday and Wednesday, 2:00-3:15 p.m.
Dr. Peter Leone, Department of Special Education
Students enrolled in this seminar will
develop a set of competencies that enable them to understand the contexts
and forces that have shaped current beliefs about disability and deviance.
Specifically, after completing the course, students will be able to:
· Describe mechanisms developed by societies to identify and
classify individuals who differ significantly from the norm;
· Discuss the evolution of taxonomies and schemas
that have been used to respond to deviance and disability in society;
· Describe the roles that institutions play in
controlling individuals who violate social norms as well as treat for
deviant and disabled individuals;
· Identify social, political, and professional
forces that shape responses to individuals labeled as deviant or disabled;
· Discuss theories associated with the overrepresentation
of individuals with significant mental health problems and other disabling
conditions in juvenile corrections, jails, and prisons;
· Analyze how media shape and reinforce beliefs
about deviance and disability that may or may not be consistent with
the views of the professions, individuals, and their families;
· Apply concepts learned in class to a discussion of the treatment
and classification of individuals visited, following a visit to a juvenile
or adult correctional facility.
The seminar format facilitates the discussion of concepts and the development
of analytical skills among participants. Students will read assigned
material, participate in a discussion of readings and films, write two
reaction papers, prepare and present a position paper, and complete
a midterm and a final exam.
Tentative Readings:
· Baca, J. S. (2001). A place to stand: The making of a poet.
New York: Grove Press.
· Beers, C. W. (1907, 1981). A mind that found itself. Pittsburgh:
University of Pittsburgh Press.
· Butterfield, F. (1995). All God’s children: The Bosket family
and the American tradition of violence. New York: Avon.
· Carcaterra, L. (1995). Sleepers. New York: Ballantine Books.
· Gould, S.J. (1981, 1996). The mismeasure of man. New York:
W.W. Norton.
· Hoeg, P. (1994). Borderliners. New York: Farrar, Straus, &
GirouxWhitaker, R. (2002). Mad in America: Bad science, bad medicine,
and the enduring mistreatment of the mentally ill. Cambridge, MA: Perseus
Publishing.
CORE: Behaviorial and Social Sciences [SB] and CORE
Human Cultural Diversity [D]