Activity #1: Ableism 1.28.13
TSD-SJPLS
Activity #1: Identifying Ableism in Disney’s Films
Purpose of the Activity:
Students learn to recognize how the media portrays messages about characters with disabilities. Students are to analyze the messages and determine if it helps educate or hurts the images of the people with disabilities. They are to study how the characters adapt or the environment adapts to fit the lifestyle. Goal is for student to realize that disability is omnipresent and so are abilities.
Materials Needed:
PowerPoint (use Ableism PPT)
Laptop and/or access to internet (if none, then teacher can look up photos and print each)
Instructions for the Activity:
Have students split in groups where they can focus better
Ask students to think of as many characters with disabilities or “disadvantages” in Disney films (if they cannot think of enough, they can include Pixar, Dreamwork, and other large animated film company)
Some movies/character to guide students:
Atlantis: Milo James Thatch-Glasses, Mole- very near sighted
Alice in Wonderland: Dormouse- narcolepsy, Mad Hatter- mercury poisoning
Beauty & the Beast- Beast: man-beast, Chip- Damaged tea cup
Chicken Little - speech impediment, Glasses
Captain James Hook – Amputee, patched eye
Dumbo—Large ears
Finding Nemo: Nemo- Damaged fin, Dory- Memory problems, Little seahorse- H20 intolerant
Happy Feet—Couldn’t sing like others, but found he was a wonderful dancer
Mulan—Was a girl (girls weren’t supposed to be in martial arts), Fa Shu – the disabled father
The Little Mermaid- Ariel- couldn’t sing
Winnie the Pooh – Pooh Bear, intellectual disability, Eeyore- Kept loosing his tail, depression, Rabbit - eating disorder
Quasimodo – hunchback
Snow White - All 7 Dwarfs are dwarfs, Sleepy-narcolepsy
Info.TexasDHHResources.org/SocialJustice
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