Home > Get Involved > Schools > Lesson 2
Aim
To enable pupils to understand some of the difficulties a disabled person may face.

Learning Outcomes
The purpose of these tasks is to encourage pupils to think about their own bodies and mobility issues, through a series of interactive activities. CIT: 2b-c, 3a.
PSHE: 1b.
PSHE3: 3b.
ICT: 1b.
HE-SH: D4.
ES-PS-PN: D1, E1.
ES-PS-RR: D3. Activity
Whizz-Hintz
Whizz-Factz

Learning Outcomes
Pupils should gain further understanding of the barriers that a young disabled person faces.
CIT: 1a, 2b-c, 3a, 3c.
PSHE: 1b, 3a.
PSHE3: 3b.
HE-SH: F4.
ES-PS-PN: D1.
ES-PS-RR: D1, D3.
Activity
In small groups, encourage pupils to discuss the barriers or problems that 15-year-old’s may deal with in an average school day. Perhaps write the suggestions in a place for all to see.
Min has Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, a degenerative disability that causes ongoing weakening of muscles in the body, preventing freedom of movement. I go to a school of 900 pupils. It is not my local school, which I would have preferred to attend. When I moved to secondary school, I had to leave all my friends.
The school won’t provide accessible transport as I’m the only wheelchair user in the area.
My teaching assistant is the only person in the school who is rained to help with my personal care. If he is off sick, I have to stay at home. The school seems to think that just because I am disabled I need a lot of protecting. I am not allowed to go into the playground on my own. This makes my classmates think I cannot fend for myself without the help of an adult.
Whizz-Tipz
The list below offer some suggestions of the difficulties Min may have.
Ask students to group the barriers suggested in the first part of the exercise into the following three categories:
Environmental
Attitudinal
Institutional
Such as an organisation’s policies, practices and procedures, lack of antidiscrimination legislation.– For example, Meiying’s parent sent her to a special needs schools.
She has to travel a long way to go to an accessible school and so do not have friends that live locally. Even those disabled young people that go to mainstream school often have a similar situation.
Feedback ideas and suggestions to the larger group. Make clear that many of these barriers overlap.
Maintain the idea that people need to change their attitudes in order to be pro-active in changing the environment and institutions.
Learning Outcomes
The discussion will establish the viewpoint that it is society that disables individuals and that the responsibility to change lies with society; in the environment, in institutions and in people’s attitudes towards disabled people.
CIT: 1a, 1f, 2a-c, 3a, 3c.
PSHE: 3a, 3c, 4b.
ES-PS-PN: E1.
ES-PS-CD: D2, E2, F1.
Split the class into two groups and give them one of the case studies below each. Ask them to prepare a short presentation describing the image of disability shown, to deliver to the rest of the class. Perhaps students would like to act out the parts?
Activity
Read through the two case studies with the class.
Samuel, 16, has cerebral palsy and uses a manual chair:
I am in a wheelchair as I cannot walk unaided. Tomorrow I am meeting the doctor again so he can try to make me better. I have been to the hospital many times this year already, often for weeks at a time. This means I miss school and have to repeat my lessons at home.
I look out the window and see everyone moving around freely, whilst I’m stuck in bed. I would like to be normal like other children.
Kamila, 11, has hydrocephalus and spina bifida and uses a powered wheelchair:
When I am at home, I’m not disabled. We live in an adapted bungalow, with low door handles and no steps. My bedroom is bright pink and is tucked away at the end of the house, where I can speak to all my friends using my voice-recognition computer and my video phone.
I can travel to my school with my friends now; we always stop and stock up on sweets on the way. The pathway is flat and there is a ramp at the entrance.’
Bring the class back together to present their findings. Next, read out the following two descriptions and ask the class if they can match up the model with the case study. Is it a positive image or negative image? Why?
The Medical Model:
The Social Model:
Promote a discussion on the idea that it is society that disables. Therefore the responsibility to change moves away from the individual and onto society. Ask pupils which of these ways of thinking they were more familiar with. Has the lesson changed their views at all?
Whizz-Factz
This attitude will send a positive message to all those encountered whether they are disabled or non-disabled, helping to break down some of the many obstacles that disabled people face.
Encourage the students to think of the day when all the barriers are removed and disabled people won’t be ‘disabled’ at all.
Learning Outcomes
This activity offers the pupils a chance to take part in a planned process of survey investigation, and follow up with work with discussion and analysis, whilst learning about the importance of accessibility for disabled people.
CIT: 2a, 3a-b.
PSHE: 4a, 4c
PSHE4: 3c
ICT: 1a-b, 3a-b.
ICT3: 1c.
ICT4: 6.
GEOG: 1c-d, 1f. HE-SH: D4
ES-PS-PN: D1.
ES-PS-RR: D1, D3.
Activities
Explain to the group that independent movement can have a dramatic effect on disabled children, often taking them from isolation to inclusion and giving them the chance to join in with friends and family.
Having independent movement from an early age is not only essential to a child’s overall growth and development, but also, vitally, increases their confidence and self-esteem.
However, one barrier created by society is the lack of access that means that even when a disabled young person has independent mobility through their wheelchair they may still face obstacles that stop them being able to carry out everyday activities.
Please refer to the ‘Accessibility Survey’ worksheet and provide each pupil with a copy.
Following the instructions on the sheet, encourage students to visit as many areas as possible and to note down all the data they collect on their activity sheet.
Whizz-Tipz
Learning Outcomes
Familiarising the students about current legislation and how it impacts the lives of young disabled people.
CIT: 1a, 2a-c, 3a-c.
PSHE: 1b, 4a-c.
ICT: 1a-b, 3a-b,
ICT3: 5c.
ICT4: 5d, 6.
HE-SH: D4.
ES-PS-PN: E1-2.
ES-PS-RR: D1, D3.
ES-PS-CD: E2, F1.
Activities
Following on from the accessibility audit, ask pupils to research the Disability Discrimination Act (known as the DDA) and its impact on accessibility in schools, using websites and information from disability or government organisations.
Explain that the DDA created new laws aimed at ending the discrimination which many people face, making it unlawful to treat disabled people less favourably than other people for a reason related to their disability.
Mention that the DDA is particularly topical for schools in 2005. For education providers, new duties came into effect in September 2002 under Part IV of the DDA as amended by the Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA).
These require schools, colleges, universities, providers of adult education and youth services to ensure that they do not discriminate against disabled people.
The next phase, which will come into force in September 2005, will require education providers to consider making reasonable physical changes.
Whizz-Tipz
Useful websites are listed below. Many of these are carefully presented to make them accessible for individuals with disabilities. For example, the size of text may be large and be left aligned, limitations on pop-up screens or have auditory descriptions. Ask the pupils to comment on the usability of the sites.
Whizz-Factz
By being an ambassador I can help Whizz-Kidz gain more publicity and also try to change things for disabled people in my local area