Christine Ashby, associate professor of inclusive education, has been named Director of the Institute on Communication and Inclusion within the School of Education.
Ashby has served as the Institute’s Director of Research from 2009-2012. In 2011, she was the principal organizer of a scientific and methods conference on facilitated communication sponsored by the Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation and the John P. Hussman Foundation, held at the M.I.T. Media Lab in Cambridge, Mass.
In announcing Ashby’s appointment, Dean Biklen says,
“Professor Ashby brings enormous talent as an educator and researcher to the leading international center focusing on strategies of communication and participation for people with autism and related developmental disabilities. She is widely known for her ground breaking research and has exceptional administrative talents. The field is fortunate to have her in this new leadership role.”
Ashby’s research challenges traditional conceptions of intellectual disabilities and underscores the importance of considering the voice of individuals with significant disabilities. Her research has appeared in numerous scholarly journals, including the International Journal of Inclusive Education, Disability and Society, Teacher Education and Special Education, Equity and Excellence in Education and Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities. In addition, she is well known for her educational consultations with school districts and families on topics of inclusive education reform, supports for students with autism, access to general education and facilitated communication.
The work of the Institute on Communication and Inclusion, and previously the Facilitated Communication Institute, has been featured nationally in publications such as the New York Times, Time Magazine, People, and Newsweek, academic journals in education, communication and disability studies, as well as on numerous television shows. Faculty and staff at the institute have collaborated on documentary films about their work, including the recent documentary “Wretches and Jabberers” (2010) and the 2004 Academy-Award nominated documentary “Autism Is A World.”
The institute was founded by Biklen in 1992 at the School of Education and he has since served as director. He will continue to participate in the Institute’s work as a senior researcher.