Disclosure Dances in Doctoral Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodology
- How do doctoral researchers with chronic illnesses, disabilities, and/or neurodivergence navigate disclosure during their doctoral journey?
- How do disabled, chronically ill, and/or neurodivergent doctoral researchers manage their various physical surroundings and working environments in order to accommodate their specific needs?
2.2. Sampling
2.3. Methods
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Disclosure Experiences
“I did [disclose to the supervisor] because […] I thought it’s better if I tell her [supervisor] and not feel so guilty when I’m not as productive. Yeah, for me the reason was to not feel guilt on top of the kind of pressure to be productive.”(Participant 1)
“I knew I had to be up front […] I got sent to disability services to see if there was anything they could help with and I ended up with a really, really supportive disability advisor who I relied on a lot for advice […] being upfront definitely worked for me.”(Participant 9)
“I would like to be able to tell them [peers and supervisors], but it never feels right because I don’t know how that will turn out.”(Participant 8)
“My fiancée is also in the department in a PhD program. So, he definitely knows but outside of that I’ve only told maybe two people. I wouldn’t deny it, if it was ever brought up. But I haven’t gone out of my way to tell people.”(Participant 6)
“I don’t think it did me any good to have disclosed it. Having disclosed it to him, I just felt like he saw me as weak. The new supervisor does know and they’re of a different generation of academic, and she’s a lot younger in that sense […] she has been very understanding.”(Participant 5)
“I think depression is such a common experience and it’s also something that can happen from just environmental triggers. So, I think most people know somebody who was depressed. But quite few people know somebody who was bipolar. And yeah, in my opinion it’s also the DSM codes for bipolar that are a bit stigmatizing, because it’s always about sex and spending a lot of money.”(Participant 1)
“I’m more, just, worried that people will not, still not take it seriously but I’m not embarrassed to say that I am [disabled].”(Participant 10)
“He [second supervisor] creates a really hostile environment. It’s not just in seminars. It’s all aspects of any meetings that involve him. I am NOT as open about anything going on with him as I am with my main supervisor.”(Participant 4)
“I’ve not shared with my classmates. Sadly, I never spoke up about that in class. But my professors, a couple of them had chats about like how it is to manage chronic disease.”(Participant 9)
“I picked those people [peers] because we had first perhaps talked about some aspect of mental health and I think that both of them have some experience with mental illness themselves so you get quite good at feeling the waters, if this is somebody who can listen and actually um understand it or at least sympathize in a way.”(Participant 1)
“My self-management is mainly my scheduling and eating, and eating only home-cooked meals. I get sick anytime I eat out, so, that’s obviously a barrier. How do you explain yourself to your peer friends. Like ’oh I can’t go for a doughnut or coffee‘. […] Human relationships haven’t been too lucky this past year.”(Participant 9)
“Everyone in my program, like professors, they know what’s happening. But if for instance it’s a visiting lecturer, I’m obviously not gonna go up before they start talking and explain why I’m sitting there [at the back, by the exit door, on the floor]. So, I do think it can make people think that I’m being disrespectful or that I don’t care, that I have something better to do.”(Participant 7)
3.2. Career Considerations
“I think especially as a PhD student it looked kind of bad if you do that [leave early]. It’s one thing if you’re a tenure-track faculty member and you just peace out during a meeting, but you don’t do that when you’re in my position.”(Participant 7)
“Whether you will finish your PhD, so much of that is wrapped up in how competent you seem to your supervisor and to a team whether it’s a panel or just the wider supervisory team, you know.”(Participant 9)
“I’m thinking about the people that I’ve spoken to. I guess the experience of having disclosed does shape the future. So, the person I spoke to this morning, and I said something similar, he has had a bad experience in the past and now he’s kind of “Wow, well I’m not sure whether I want to do that, go there again.”(Participant 6)
“I’ve only attended conferences within the institution thus far.[…] Within the institution they tend to be a bit smaller, so yeah, it’d be interesting to see how in that kind of conference and circuit how I am feeling there.”(Participant 10)
“I had one last summer and it was my first. Very overwhelming. It definitely was the moment that I realized, like, I don’t know if I can do this like forever, long term.”(Participant 6)
“One of the main problems I have with conferences and training events and things like that is just the sheer volume of information being presented and the length of, the duration of them. Because it tends to be a full day of training, and then social events, or social events and networking in the evening, or like meals and things, that by this point, you know, I’m exhausted. I have a very slow processing speed. I struggle to interpret lots of information, you know. So, when I’m being presented out for the full day, by the end of it, my brain has just turned to a sieve.”(Participant 5)
“If I have a conference or if I have a seminar or something like that that I’m attending, I always have to kind of get in touch with the organizer in advance because a lot of our seminar rooms in our university and particularly the ones that our division uses, are either underground or they are they don’t have any windows […] certain seminar rooms I kind of almost know to the minute how long I can stay in there. There’s certain seminar rooms where I know after 20 min I have to go outside, I have to walk around in the sunlight [to avoid a migraine].”(Participant 4)
“I don’t want to be a bipolar activist in academia. I don’t want to be the bipolar person. I applied for a job before my PhD as like a research assistant in a project on bipolar or mental illness. And then I thought, nah. Actually, I don’t want this to be on my CV necessarily. Especially not so early in my career.”(Participant 1)
“In terms of my career plans, do I plan to become an activist? Probably yes, but that would then include disclosing to my peers. So yeah, I’ve just kind of taken this slow pace to be, to adapt into my own body and what I need, and the stage of what society needs for me will come later.”(Participant 8)
“I wouldn’t say I am an activist, yet. Because I haven’t really done anything. But I’m warming towards it, realizing that, you know, I feel like I should do something. Noone else is going to do it. At least in my University, unfortunately.”(Participant 10)
3.3. Navigating Spaces and Academic Buildings
“Some of the adjustments that I got from the disability services here at this school was to have letters of support for my professors and assignments. Say if I had a flare-up of cystitis or something, that I could talk to them and discuss what alternative either grading or alternative deadline could be done for me.”(Participant 8)
“Light, natural light is really important. If there isn’t the natural light, it has an immediate, instant effect on my mood, and it feels very hemmed in.”(Participant 3)
“So, particularly with my migraines, I find that exposure to natural light, particularly like sunlight as opposed to artificial light, reduces the chance that I’ll have a migraine.”(Participant 4)
“It’s one of those things. When we’re looking at prejudice and we’re looking at barriers, when we talk about things like LGBTQ+ rights, when we’re talking about Black Lives Matter, when we’re talking about feminism, you can talk. And my problem is I frequently can’t even get in the building or the room to have the conversations. […] I have to actually get in the room and that physical barrier, that physicality of the ‘I can’t even get in the room’ is just as offensive as constantly being the person that stopped and searched as a black person, constantly being the person that’s misgendered as a transgender person. It’s a daily aggression to you, and it’s not even micro because it can be a physically damaging aggression to you.”(Participant 2)
“I actually know the back of buildings on my campus so well. I’m not someone who gets in the front door of most buildings […] I even walk in the back way of the library. And that to me is like the central nervous system of a university of knowledge. Right? How do you get into a library well, if you’re not invited by the front way and you’re only invited by the back?”(Participant 11)
“Campuses are always changing because there are construction projects and for me that is a big deal.”(Participant 6)
“You’re in the building and I find that there isn’t an awareness, you know, of, you know, just how fluid spaces can be. And I have had this warning early when I was getting my guide cane training. […] I don’t want to have to look down all the time to make sure I’m not missing a step or miss somebody’s backpack or miss a computer cord. I just had no idea how many things people put down on the ground.”(Participant 11)
“So, when I talked about the busyness of people, I get very anxious. I can pick up vibes, pick up energies.”(Participant 3)
“You have huge surges of students going through. And as a wheelchair user, you have to use what I call American football techniques to get through crowds. You pick a blocker in front of you, preferably large male, and you follow them and they part the crowd for you. You stay behind them very closely and they do the parting and you keep going through, because, because you’re seated, it’s exactly the same as car drivers not seeing cyclists and bikes. You’re the wrong shape and so you’re not seen, and so I am literally walked into any amount of times. And within buildings obviously it’s compressed”.(Participant 2)
“There is a lot more planning involved. Oh, vast, vast amounts more planning. Even as much as just getting across the campus. You plan your routes.”(Participant 1)
“Sometimes I find I’ll avoid certain areas. […] they tend to put out these lemon-scented things to disperse the smell. And I will arrange my route to avoid them wherever they are because I find them very triggering both for my migraines and for my asthma.”(Participant 4)
“I know a lot of people with disabilities who love to teach early in the morning. So that once they leave, most people are coming in.”(Participant 9)
“The other thing is, once it becomes evening, and there aren’t people about, then I generally don’t work. And the reason for that is: lifts break. And that’s the major reason: lifts break. […] And it’s not just you’re stuck, oh whoa, you know, yeah, I have my mobile with me, I can phone security, they can close estates and go panic. But my wheelchair weighs 132 kg. How the hell do you get that down a set of stairs safely for everybody else doing it? You know, I’m not wanting to break anybody else either.”.(Participant 2)
“I know if I’m doing all right that day it’s not an issue. But in particular kinds of rooms like the common rooms where people are cooking or where people are eating food because you can’t necessarily stand the smell very easily, or perfume of other people, those kinds of things could potentially also mean that you have to navigate your way around back.”(Participant 7)
“I think, um, there’s, there’s a theme. It’s a pattern, which is that it involves avoidance.”(Participant 3)
“I sit in the back but I also physically crack the door, so that the latch wouldn’t make a noise if I have to leave.”(Participant 7)
“I also would say that I look for bathrooms that are out of the way, too. Like if I’m going to be sick, I’d really prefer, not to have one of my students walk in, you know, at that moment. So, I try to find the low traffic areas.”(Participant 8)
“I request a quiet room where I can go and lie down and rest because if I have a migraine, I need somewhere to kind of withdraw to.”(Participant 4)
“You bring in your own foods for lunch and you have your own kind of sandwiches or snacks or wraps or whatever it is, and that makes you stand out, you know. You’re avoiding situations where, where food is being eaten together.”(Participant 8)
“I’m quite sensitive and it’s my ADHD. I get very distracted by things around me, and the people in the corridor, and what they’re doing. So, I usually shut my door […] I actually feel removed in a way from everybody.”(Participant 3)
“The thing is at that point you’re just in so much pain, and it’s like I need this, what am I meant to do now? And then you end up, like, finding a corner under stairs or something like that, and just literally like curling up on the floor. So, the last conference I was at, um again they promised there would be a room. And it turned out that their plan was that I could use the organizer’s office while they carried on using it as an office because they thought, I just needed somewhere quiet to sit. And it was the most disgusting, like, I needed to lie down somewhere, and the floor, I swear that floor had never been hoovered. It was just, it was foul.”(Participant 4)
“When I came back to work with my, as I call it, “new normal”, I checked what the emergency protocols were, because I was thinking “I better memorize them”. I better memorize these spaces because it’s also an issue of life or death. And I was actually told “We would like you to wait in your office and we’ll come get you.””(Participant 2)
4. Discussion
4.1. Challenges and Limitations
4.2. Implications and Future Directions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Brown, N. Disclosure Dances in Doctoral Education. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13120689
Brown N. Disclosure Dances in Doctoral Education. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(12):689. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13120689
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrown, Nicole. 2024. "Disclosure Dances in Doctoral Education" Social Sciences 13, no. 12: 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13120689
APA StyleBrown, N. (2024). Disclosure Dances in Doctoral Education. Social Sciences, 13(12), 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13120689