Serving Students with Disabilities
Distance Learning Course
SUBJECT: Access 7: MOBILITY
The purpose of this lesson is to increase your awareness of issues and strategies related specifically to working with students with MOBILITY IMPAIRMENTS.
What challenges might students with MOBILITY impairments face in your department or office? How could you make it more accessible now? What additional accommodations might students with mobility impairments require?
There are many types of ORTHOPEDIC or NEUROMUSCULAR impairments that can impact mobility. These include but are not limited to amputation, paralysis, Cerebral Palsy, Stroke, Multiple Sclerosis, Muscular Dystrophy, Arthritis, and spinal cord injury. Mobility impairments range from LOWER BODY impairments, which may require use of canes, walkers, or wheelchairs, to UPPER BODY impairments, which may include limited or no use of the upper extremities and hands. It is IMPOSSIBLE to GENERALIZE about functional abilities because of the wide variety of disabilities and specific diagnoses. MOBILITY impairments can be PERMANENT or TEMPORARY. A broken bone, an injury, or a surgical procedure can temporarily impact a student.
A mobility impairment may impact, to varying degrees, a student's ability to MANIPULATE objects, turn pages, write with a pen or pencil, type at a keyboard, or retrieve research materials. Medical conditions such as Arthritis or repetitive stress injuries can impact fine motor abilities. A student's physical ability may also vary from day to day.
Examples of accommodations for students with MOBILITY impairments include the following:
MOBILITY impairments may make walking, sitting, bending, carrying, or using fingers, hands, or arms difficult or impossible. Mobility impairments may be permanent or temporary and result from many causes, including amputation, Multiple Sclerosis, spinal cord injury, and Cerebral Palsy.
By working together, YOU, the STUDENT, and the DISABLED STUDENT SERVICES OFFICE can assure that the accommodations provided are appropriate and reasonable.
Suppose you are serving a student in your office who cannot write with her hands. Send an email message to the group answering the following question:
What are some things she might reasonably request to facilitate access to your program?
Your email SUBJECT line should read: Access 7: MOBILITY.
You can read answers to frequently asked questions, explore case studies, and access additional resources at The Conference Room, https://www.washington.edu/doit/distance-learning-course-serving-students-disabilities.
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