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Reasonable Accommodations: A Faculty Guide to Teaching College Students With Disabilities

Teaching Students with Mobility and Hand-Function Disabilities

students taking notes in class

Getting to and from class
In class
Out of class assignments

A wide range of conditions may limit mobility and/or hand function. Among the most common permanent disorders are such musculoskeletal disabilities as partial or total paralysis, amputation or severe injury, arthritis, active sickle cell disease, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, and cerebral palsy. Additionally, respiratory and cardiac diseases can be debilitating and may consequently affect mobility. Any of these conditions may also impair the strength, speed, endurance, coordination, and dexterity that are necessary for proper hand function.

While the degree of disability varies, students may have difficulty getting to or from class, performing in class, and managing out of class assignments and tests. [Top]

Getting to and from class: Physical access to classrooms is a major concern of students with mobility disabilities. Those who use wheelchairs, braces, crutches, canes, or prostheses, or who fatigue easily, find it difficult moving about, especially within the time constraints imposed by class schedules.

Occasional lateness may be unavoidable. Tardiness or absence may be caused by transportation problems, inclement weather, elevator, or wheelchair breakdown. Getting from class may pose similar problems, especially in cases of emergency.

In class: Some courses and classrooms present obstacles to the full participation of students with mobility disabilities. In seating such students, every effort ought to be made to integrate them into the class. Relegating these students to a doorway, a side aisle or the back of the room should be avoided. Even such apparently insurmountable barriers as fixed seating may be overcome by arranging for a chair to be unbolted and removed to make room for a wheelchair. Laboratory stations too high for wheelchair users to reach or transfer to, or with insufficient undercounted knee clearance, may be modified or they may be replaced by portable stations. Otherwise, the assistance of an aide to follow the student's lab instructions may be necessary.

Students with hand function disabilities may have similar difficulties in the laboratory and in the classroom doing in class writing assignments and taking written tests. For such students:

Out of class assignments: For students with mobility and/or hand function disabilities, the use of the library for research assignments may present obstacles. Arrangements for assistance with library personnel may have to be made for access to card catalogues, bookshelves, microfiche and other equipment, or for manipulating the pages of publications. Because the completion of required work may thus be delayed, the extension of deadlines and the employment of "Incomplete" grades may be appropriate.

Off campus assignments and field work may pose similar problems of access to resources. Instructors should consider such expedients as advance notice to students who rely on special transportation, the extension of deadlines, and alternative assignments. [Top]

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