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Understanding and Accommodating Students with Disabilities

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Most common disabilities at W&J?learning, ADD, and psychological ... Books on tape/CD and Braille. Permission to record lectures. Interpreters ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding and Accommodating Students with Disabilities


1
Understanding and Accommodating Students with
Disabilities
  • Presented by Catherine Sherman
  • Associate Director
  • Center for Learning Teaching
  • Washington Jefferson College
  • February 10, 2005

2
Main Topics
  • The Numbers
  • What is a disability?
  • Disability Types
  • Accommodation Process
  • Helpful Teaching Techniques
  • Questions Answers

3
WJ Fall 2004 Stats
  • CS met with 27 students with disabilities for 66
  • total appointments, Fall 2004
  • Most common disabilities at WJ?learning, ADD,
    and psychological
  • CS met with 28 students for 20032004 academic
    year

4
Enrollment Trends
  • Enrollment in post-secondary institutions
  • continues to rise
  • Percentage of freshmen with disabilities has
    doubled since the late 70s.
  • K-12 special education, advocacy, and awareness
  • Medical and therapeutic advancements
  • Technology

Source Cathy Henderson, College Freshmen with
Disabilities A Statistical Profile, HEATH
Resource Center, American Council of Education,
1992
5
Post-Secondary Statistics
  • In 2000, 6 of full-time, first-year students at
    four-
  • year institutions reported a disability. Below
    is the
  • breakdown by disability type in percentages

Source Cathy Henderson, 2001 College Freshman
with Disabilities Report, HEATH Resource Center,
American Council on Education
6
Additional Stats
  • Percentage of college freshmen with a disability
  • reporting an LD
  • 198816
  • 2000?40
  • Most common disability type
  • 1988?Vision impairment
  • 2000?LD
  • Source Cathy Henderson, 2001 College Freshman
    with Disabilities Report,
  • HEATH Resource Center, American Council on
    Education

7
What is a disability?
  • A physical or mental impairment that
    substantially limits a major life activity.
  • Some major life activities include caring for
    oneself, performing manual tasks, learning,
    seeing, moving, hearing, and speaking.
  • Physical, psychological, and learning

8
Physical/ Medical
  • Include congenital conditions, mobility
    impairments, injuries, and chronic medical
    conditions
  • Some examples include blindness, deafness,
    epilepsy, paralysis, brain injury, asthma,
    chronic fatigue syndrome, and cerebral palsy.

9
Psychological
  • Psychological disabilities include emotional,
    cognitive, and behavioral disturbances, as well
    biochemical/structural brain differences.
  • Some examples include anxiety disorders,
    Aspergers Syndrome, autism, bipolar disorder,
    depression, and schizophrenia.

10
Psychological Disability Characteristics
  • A hidden disability, issues of stigma
  • Difficulty initiating interpersonal communication
  • Difficulty with concentration, focus, and memory
  • Mood swings, unwanted thoughts, inappropriate
    affect
  • Struggles with change

11
Characteristics, contd.
  • Severe test anxiety
  • Low tolerance for distractions
  • Poor time management/ organizational skills
  • Low energy
  • Medication side-effects

12
Learning
  • Hidden disability neurologically-based
    life-long
  • Average to above average intelligence
  • Impairs ability to take in, process, and express
    information
  • Manifested in deficits in oral communication,
    writing, reading, listening comprehension,
    mathematical skills

13
Learning, contd.
  • Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) is not a
    learning disability though nearly 25 of college
    students with LD have ADD
  • Its frustrating!

Source Loring C. Brinckerhoff, College Students
with Learning Disabilities, Third edition,
Association on Higher Education and Disability,
2001
14
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD/ADHD)
  • Disorder marked by impaired concentration and
    attention
  • Three subtypes Inattentive, Hyperactive and
    Impulsive
  • Biological in origin, genetic connection
  • More frequently diagnosed in males than females

15
ADD Characteristics
  • Inability to consistently concentrate
  • Easily distracted or overwhelmed
  • Difficulty following a train of thought
  • Restlessness, fidgets?feels driven by a motor

16
Characteristics, contd.
  • Anxiety reactions
  • Difficulty taking apart and/or organizing
    information, ideas, or assignments
  • Difficulty controlling impulses
  • Source College Students Who Have ADHD,
    Association for
  • Higher Education and Disability, 2002

17
Accommodations
  • How do we help a student with a disability?
  • An adjustment that ensures equal access to
    educational opportunities

18
Disability Law and College Policy
  • Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
    (IDEA)
  • Once called the Education for all Handicapped
    Children Act, 1975
  • Mandates free, appropriate public education for
    all K-12 students
  • School vs. student responsibility

19
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 1973
  • Protects rights of otherwise qualified students
    with disabilities
  • Otherwise qualified?able to meet essential
    standards with appropriate accommodations
  • Applies to all post-secondary institutions that
    receive federal funds

20
Americans with Disabilities Act, 1990
  • Supports and extends Section 504
  • Prohibits the discrimination in postsecondary
    institutions
  • Defines disability

21
Washington Jefferson College Disability Policy
  • Fully supports Section 504 and ADA
  • Committed to providing reasonable accommodations
    to students with disabilities admitted through
    our regular admission process

22
Accommodation Process at WJ General Points
  • It is the students responsibility to begin the
    process in a timely manner.
  • Submission of documentation is not the same as a
    request for services.
  • WJ has specific documentation requirements
    (located on CLT page).
  • Accommodations are not retroactive.

23
Instructor Rights
  • Instructor may accommodate without documentation.
  • Instructor has the right to decline request
    without appropriate College notification.
  • It is not the instructors responsibility to
    figure out appropriate accommodations.
  • Instructors do not alter course
    content/objectives.

24
Steps
  • Faculty referral
  • Self-disclosure and request for accommodations
  • Discussion with CS, forms
  • Submission of official documentation
  • Discussion of accommodations

25
Steps, contd.
  • Letter of request for accommodations
  • Student and instructor meeting
  • Completion and return of Accommodation Agreement
    form
  • Letter of request for instructors records

26
Confidentiality
  • Need-to-know basis
  • Student signature required for release of
    information
  • Exceptions
  • Student not required to disclose disability
  • Sharing information with parents

27
Sample Accommodations
  • Exam modification CLT will provide assistance
  • Books on tape/CD and Braille
  • Permission to record lectures
  • Interpreters
  • Scribes/Voice-activated software
  • Peer note taker

28
Accommodations, contd.
  • Permission to use word processor and/or
    spell/grammar checker.
  • Flexible attendance requirements
  • Preferential seating (near door or in front of
    class)
  • Access to primary campus buildings, to include
    ramped entrances and handicap parking
  • Accessible campus housing
  • Relocation of classes into accessible buildings

29
Helpful Teaching Techniques Universal Design
  • Universal design of instruction is a
  • teaching approach that respects
  • diversity and makes the classroom
  • experience accessible to all students.

30
Examples
  • Put a statement on your syllabus inviting
    students to meet with you to discuss their
    learning needs
  • Assure that all classrooms, labs, and fieldwork
    are in accessible locations
  • Use multiple modes to deliver content
  • Use captioned videotapes

31
Examples, contd.
  • Provide printed materials in electronic format
  • Use Web pages with both text descriptions and
    graphics
  • Choose texts early
  • Create printed materials in simple, consistent
    formats

32
Examples, contd.
  • Provide multiple ways for students to demonstrate
    knowledge
  • Make sure equipment and activities minimize
    sustained physical effort
  • Source DO-IT, University of Washington

33
Additional Suggestions
  • Choose a text with a study guide, available in
    electronic format
  • Provide a detailed syllabus, clearly noting
    course objectives, reading assignments, due dates
  • Write new or technical vocabulary on the board

34
Suggestions, contd.
  • Break a large assignment into small steps, check
    progress
  • Give assignments aloud and in writing
  • Speak directly to students with vision/hearing
    limitations

35
CS Goals
  • Understand disability and how it impacts learning
  • Develop self-advocacy skills
  • Strengthen self-help skills
  • Encourage academic independence
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