Exploring the Knowledge, Skills and Experiences of Mothers of Children With Dyslexia in Kenya
Abstract
This study situated the knowledge, skills, and experiences of mothers of children
with dyslexia in Kenya. It explores the untold narratives of mothering children with
dyslexia in Kenya. The literature review indicates that mothers' central role in
caring for dyslexic children cannot be understated. More specifically, mothers are
fundamental actors in their children's educational processes, and therefore, their
knowledge, skills, and experiences are critical. However, their contributions are
rarely considered in policy interventions and, therefore, they remain invisible from
mainstream dyslexia discourse and literature in Kenya. The study explored the
mothers’ first- hand experiences to gain insights of their profiles, skills and
knowledge potential. The objectives were to characterize and profile the identities
of the mothers, assess their skill and knowledge potential and analyse the
implications of the key issues they raised on Specific Education Needs Policy,
research programming in Kenya. Ten mothers were purposefully selected from a
Nairobi-based social support group. A feminist framework was used to identify,
reframe, and situate women as the starting point as owners and producers of their
knowledge. Maternal and feminist theories of education and sociology were
explored. A qualitative ethnographic technique was used to accrue significant
comprehension of individual and collective action in the groups’ environment and
narratives of the mothers were derived from in-depth interviews. Ten key
informants, who included five teachers, four government officials and a nongovernmental
organization officer, were also interviewed. The evidence was
interpreted using Hynes' Ethnography of Communication and the ABC of Gender
Analysis. This was followed by thematic data analysis using NVivo software
version 12.0. The study revealed that mothers juggled multiple overlapping
identities and roles. It also showed that mothers have knowledge, skills, and lived
realities that enable them to support their children sufficiently. The study
contributes to African Feminist theory, and epistemology which place the
experiences and knowledge of mothers as foundational to understanding effective
interventions for African children with dyslexia. Thus, mothers' knowledge should
be acknowledged as a critical contribution to mainstream dyslexia discourse and
African feminist epistemology.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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