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'But i don't read text printed in braille font'...: parables from a business and information technology student

Published:25 June 2007Publication History

ABSTRACT

The author works in Coventry University and has been engaged in tutoring a student with disabilities who had enrolled for a degree in Business and IT at Coventry University. To do this, the author drew upon previous experiences in the Further Education (FE) sector at a College in the Midlands, where she taught Information Technology (IT) to diverse groups of students who had varied abilities. The ages of the FE students ranged from pre-16, visiting the College from a local special school to attend "taster" sessions, to adults, some of whom were seniors, attending a day centre for disabled adults that had a special arrangement for College tutors to give classes.

The degree student was a white cane user, read Braille and navigated the computer with screen reader software. During her time at University, she took on an ambassadorial role: she gave guided tours to prospective students around the University campus during open days! From time to time she would recount stories that she described as amusing but which clearly showed ignorance on the part of her tutors. The title of this presentation is taken from one of her anecdotes.

The Degree course in Business and IT had several workshops in Computing including statistics where spreadsheets and specialist software were used. The author was asked to tutor the student for the IT workshops of a year-long module. This included translating the instructional handouts from mouse-based to keyboard-based, being aware of potential problems with specialist software and the quirks of the online learning system (WebCT) [1] and finding ways of working around them all. This poster shows some of the issues related to the student's stories, the creating and translating of instructions for keyboard use and navigating the keyboard using JAWS.

References

  1. Dickinson, A. Optimising WebCT access for disabled students, 3rd Annual WebCT European User Conference, 2004, Amsterdam.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar

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  1. 'But i don't read text printed in braille font'...: parables from a business and information technology student

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      • Published in

        cover image ACM Conferences
        ITiCSE '07: Proceedings of the 12th annual SIGCSE conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education
        June 2007
        386 pages
        ISBN:9781595936103
        DOI:10.1145/1268784
        • cover image ACM SIGCSE Bulletin
          ACM SIGCSE Bulletin  Volume 39, Issue 3
          Proceedings of the 12th annual SIGCSE conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education (ITiCSE'07)
          September 2007
          366 pages
          ISSN:0097-8418
          DOI:10.1145/1269900
          Issue’s Table of Contents

        Copyright © 2007 ACM

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        Association for Computing Machinery

        New York, NY, United States

        Publication History

        • Published: 25 June 2007

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        ITiCSE '07 Paper Acceptance Rate62of210submissions,30%Overall Acceptance Rate552of1,613submissions,34%

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