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Disability Awareness

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To raise your awareness of the barriers faced by disabled students; ... Roller-skate. Boat. Train. Walk. Motorbike. Unicycle. Hovercraft. Intended learning outcomes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Disability Awareness


1
Disability Awareness
November 27th 2008
  • Dr Val Chapman
  • National Teaching Fellow
  • University of Worcester

2
This session aims
  • To raise your awareness of the barriers faced by
    disabled students
  • To help you identify and address discriminatory
    practices
  • To remind you of the Disability Discrimination
    Act (DDA) and its relevance to your own practice.

3
As a result of engaging in this session you
should be able to
  • Determine the differences between different
    models of disability
  • Describe the impact of stereotyping
  • Employ appropriate behaviour with disabled
    students
  • Identify some of the barriers faced by disabled
    students in learning, teaching and assessment
  • Identify and address discriminatory practices

4
Disability FAQs
  • Around 9 million disabled people in the UK -
    dyslexia is not included in this figure
  • Only 3 are born with disabilities
  • 93 of disabled people live in the community in
    ordinary domestic settings
  • Many disabled people have more than one
    disability
  • There are 6 million disabled people of working
    age in UK
  • Disability rates increase with age whilst 10 per
    cent of adults aged 16-24 are disabled, this
    increased to over one third in the 50 to
    retirement age category

5
Disability FAQs
  • In the UK, disability is described as those with
  • visual impairments - 1 million
  • hearing impairments - 7.5million
  • mobility problems - 1/2 million wheelchair users
  • learning difficulties - 1 million (e.g. Down's
    Syndrome)
  • mental health difficulties - includes depression,
    can be intermittent
  • invisible disabilities e.g. epilepsy, asthma
  • disfigurement
  • cancer
  • HIV

6
Images of disabled people
  • pitiable and pathetic, sweet and innocent a
    miracle cure
  • an object of violence
  • sinister and evil
  • atmosphere or curio
  • super cripple
  • an object of ridicule
  • having a chip on their shoulder/aggressive
    avenger
  • burden/outcast
  • sexually abnormal
  • incapable of participating fully in community
    life
  • normal

7
Models of disability
?
  • Medical model
  • A problem to be cured / solved /fixed
  • Focus on medical terminology or diagnosis
  • Charity or tragedy model
  • Based on pity brave, tragic, special
  • Social model
  • Living / working / social environment and
    prejudice creating barriers

?
?
8
Stereotyping and priming
  • Telethons use images of brave, smiling and
    grateful recipients of charity
  • Reliance on cute children, gives a false
    impression of the real incidence of disability
  • Creates the impression that it is not the job of
    the state to provide essential funds for
    disadvantaged groups

9
Disability Etiquette - Language
DONT USE
USE
  • person with a problem
  • handicapped, invalid
  • suffering from
  • afflicted by
  • crippled
  • special needs
  • wheelchair bound
  • confined to a wheelchair
  • deaf dumb, deaf mute
  • normal
  • disability
  • disabled person/student
  • people with impairments
  • not/non disabled
  • Deaf/person with a hearing
  • impairment (with or without
  • speech)
  • blind/partially sighted
  • wheelchair user
  • mental health difficulties

10
Disability Etiquette
DONT
DO
  • Make eye contact
  • Be patient friendly
  • Face the person when
  • speaking
  • Offer to help
  • Remember not all
  • disabilities are visible
  • Address the support worker
  • rather than the individual
  • Patronise
  • Exaggerate words slowly or speak
  • louder
  • Ask about a persons disability
  • its rude
  • Assume someone wants help

11
Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) Who is
disabled?
  • According to the Act an adult or child is
    disabled
  • if he or she has a physical or mental impairment
  • that has a
  • substantial
  • adverse
  • long term (lasting or expected to last for at
    least a year) effect on his or her ability to
    carry out normal day to day activities

11
12
What are "normal day-to-day activities"?
  • mobility
  • manual dexterity
  • physical co-ordination
  • continence
  • ability to lift, carry or otherwise move everyday
    objects
  • speech, hearing or eyesight
  • memory or ability to concentrate, learn or
  • understand
  • perception of the risk of physical danger

12
13
DDA Discrimination
  • Discrimination against disabled people can take
    place in either of two ways.
  • By treating them less favourably than other
    people
  • or
  • By failing to make a reasonable adjustment when
    they are placed at a substantial disadvantage
    compared to other people for a reason relating to
    their disability

13
14
Reasonable Adjustments
  • A reasonable adjustment might
  • be any action that helps to
  • alleviate a substantial
  • disadvantage

15
Anticipatory Adjustments
  • Institutions should consider what adjustments
  • future disabled students, applicants or
  • employees may need, and make them in advance
  • e.g.
  • training staff to work with disabled people
  • and to provide appropriate adjustments
  • altering the physical environment

16
A reasonable adjustment might be
  • changing standard institutional procedures
  • adapting the workplace, curriculum, electronic or
    other materials, or modifying the delivery of
    teaching
  • providing additional services, such as a sign
    language interpreter or materials in Braille

17
REMEMBER!
  • Adjustments are as individual as the people who
    need them and the circumstances in which they are
    used discuss what may be required with the
    disabled student.

18
A competence standard is
  • an academic, medical or other standard applied
    by or on behalf of an education provider for the
    purpose of determining whether a person has a
    particular level of competence or ability.
    (5.71)
  • For example, an applicant for a degree in music
    which
  • involves a substantial element of performance is
    required
  • to demonstrate a certain level of ability in
    playing an
  • instrument. This would be a competence standard.
  • Competence standards apply to ALL students.

19
A competence standard is not
  • For example
  • The admission criteria for a course in
    Choreography
  • include a requirement to demonstrate a high
    level of
  • physical fitness. The course itself, however, is
  • predominantly theory based and does not involve
    any
  • strenuous physical activity. This is unlikely to
    be a
  • competence standard.

20
Competence standards
  • There is no duty to make reasonable
  • adjustments to a provision, criterion or
  • practice which the Act defines as a
  • competence standard. (5.70)

21
But
  • Institutions have a duty to make reasonable
    adjustments to the way in which disabled students
    and applicants can show that they have attained
    competence standards.

22
What is inclusive assessment?
  • What is accessibility?
  • What are the curriculum/assessment design issues?

23
Equality or equivalence?
  • All students who have notified us of their
    special needs are considered as individual cases.
    Assessment and examination needs are discussed
    personally and in confidence at a special
    interview.
  • All special examination / assessment
    arrangements should be agreed well in advance,
    evidence of your disability should be submitted
    tono later than.
  • Your examinations will take place on the same
    time and date as the other students on your
    course, but will normally be in a separate room.

24
QU
  • To register with Disability Services you will
    need to attend an assessment interview with a
    Disability Officer. If you disclose your
    disability on your application form you will
    automatically be invited to meet with a member of
    Disability Services staff for an assessment
    interview once you have accepted your firm offer.

25
Equality or equivalence?
  • Consider the following words
  • prove
  • evidence
  • notify
  • special
  • separate
  • register
  • interview

How many of these words apply to ALL students?
26
Curriculum design can one size fit all?
  • Reasonable adjustments
  • e.g. allowing more time, scribe, assistive
    technology
  • Separate provision
  • e.g. different times, different rooms, different
    ways of assessing
  • Is it possible to design assessments for all...?

27
All roads lead to Rome?
Car Bicycle Plane Scooter Roller-skate Boat Train
Walk Motorbike Unicycle Hovercraft
28
Intended learning outcomes
  • Does it matter how someone demonstrates the
    achievement of a particular outcome?
  • Should everyone have a choice in the way they
    demonstrate the ILO?
  • Is it true that, for some courses, the process of
    demonstrating knowledge and understanding is a
    legitimate learning outcome in itself?

29
Inclusive L,TA key questions
  • Should we stop regarding disabled students as
    special cases ?
  • Can we design flexible and inclusive curricula
    and assessment so that all students experience
    the same educational processes and experiences?
  • Does the process of making modifications to exams
    and assessment maintain the barriers to disabled
    students full and equal participation in higher
    and further education?
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