Values

  • Supporting LIFE ENHANCEMENT through SERVICE.
  • Supporting GROWTH through LEARNING and TRANSFORMATION.
  • Supporting SOCIAL JUSTICE through HOLISTIC SOCIAL lenses.
  • Supporting ACCESS through INCLUSION.
  • Supporting EQUITY, HUMAN RIGHTS, and EMPOWERMENT through ADVOCACY and NON-VIOLENCE.
  • Supporting EMPATHY through COMPASSION.
  • Supporting EMPATHY through COMPASSION.
  • Supporting PARTICIPATION through COLLABORATION.
  • Supporting INDEPENDENCE, AUTONOMY, and CHOICE through SELF-DETERMINATION.
  • Supporting DIGNITY through a focus on STRENGTHS and ABILITIES.
  • Supporting RECONCILIATION through REFLECTION and ACTION.

Context
Disability and Work* — Workers and Employers
*Work, vocations, occupations, career.

Work is an activity where individuals [undertake] to complete tasks or to achieve outcomes which are either self-set or set by others and which may or may not be remunerated” (Cairns & Malloch, 2011, p. 4).

Vocation is
Life spent for the good of others,
rooted in deep commitments,
blossoming in satisfaction and joy.”
— C. Gregg, 2005.

People’s occupations are “the things that are important to them… like… going to work or school, participating in the community, and leisure activities”. – Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists

What do YOU stand for?

Cairns, L., & Malloch, M. (2011). Theories of work, place and learning: New directions. In M. Malloch, L. Cairns, K. Evans, & B. O’Connor (Eds.), The SAGE Handbook of workplace learning (pp. 3-16). London: SAGE.

Gregg, C. (2005). Discover “Vocation”: An Essay on the Concept of Vocation. Journal of College and Character 6:1, doi 10.2202/1940-1639.1411.