1 / 15

Inclusive Curriculum, Students with Disabilities and the Law

Inclusive Curriculum, Students with Disabilities and the Law. Kath Botham. Statistics in Education. Education : ODI Annual Report 2008, (www.odi.gov.uk) 51% of disabled persons had qualifications (71% non-disabled) 28% of disabled 19 year olds in HE (41% non-disabled)

alia
Télécharger la présentation

Inclusive Curriculum, Students with Disabilities and the Law

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Inclusive Curriculum, Students with Disabilities and the Law Kath Botham

  2. Statistics in Education • Education : ODI Annual Report 2008, (www.odi.gov.uk) • 51% of disabled persons had qualifications (71% non-disabled) • 28% of disabled 19 year olds in HE (41% non-disabled) • 8% disabled population have a degree (17% of non disabled)

  3. Statistics in Education • Numbers in HE (HESA 2007/8) • 62,510 : 7% HE of population • 43% SPLD, 16% Unseen disability • Tripled in 10yrs (23, 940 3.8% in 1997/98) • Withdrawal from HE in year 1 : • 8.6% disabled without DSA, • 5.6% with DSA , • 7.1% non disabled

  4. Disabled Students at MMU

  5. Legislation & disability

  6. Equality Act 2010 • 1st October 2010 : Consolidated all previous equality legislation • Protected Characteristics :These are the grounds upon which discrimination is unlawful. • Age, • Disability, • Gender reassignment, • Marriage and civil partnership, • Pregnancy and maternity, • Race, • Religion or belief, • sex • sexual orientation

  7. Previous protection maintained and extended • Discrimination in recruitment now illegal • NEW – Discrimination by Association • Pregnant women /mothers • Breastfeeding • School children • Public sector – ALL protected groups • Legislation extended to private clibs

  8. Other Equality Legislation • Human Rights Act (1998) – incorporates European Convention of Human Rights into domestic law • DDA 2005 :Disability Equality Duty • HEI’s must be proactive in ensuring disabled students are treated fairly & equally • Achievements must equal non disabled students • Draw up a Disability Equality Scheme • Equality Act (2006) • established a single commission Equality & Human Rights commission replacing: • Equal Opportunities commission, Disability Rights commission & Commission for Racial Equality • Expanded anti discrimination legislation related to gender, religion & belief & Sexual orientation (2007)

  9. Legal definition of disability • A physical or mental impairment which has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on a person’s ability to carry out normal day to day activities. • Temporary injuries (eg broken leg, acute mental illness) are not covered under this definition • Adjustments are therefore at the discretion of their academic department.

  10. Discrimination (in HE) • The Equality Act recognises four forms of discrimination: • Direct discrimination : “Must not treat a student less favourably” “Substantial disadvantage” • Indirect discrimination: illegal to “apply a provision, criteria, practice for all students that has the effect of putting one group at disadvantage” • Harassment • Victimisation

  11. Reasonable Adjustment • Duty to take reasonable steps to remove the disadvantage • Changing provisions, criteria, practice • Physical features • Auxiliary aids • What is Reasonable? • Practicality • Effectiveness • Disruption • Availability of finance • Anticipatory element

  12. Competence standards • an academic, medical or other standard applied by or on behalf of a HEI for the purpose of determining whether aperson has a particular level of ability (DDA Pt4, section 28s) • Competence standards cannot justify direct discrimination but may justify indirect discrimination. • Standard must be: • Genuine • Applied to all students • Proportional to the aim sought • If standard meets requirement above no need for reasonable adjustments

  13. Disclosure and Confidentiality • HEI’s have to prove have taken reasonable steps to encourage disclosure. • DDA states once disclosed to a member of the organisation may be deemed to have disclosed to the organisation • Once explicit, written consent has been gained • Following disclosure • Duty of organisation to pass on appropriate information to all relevant staff • External organisations – requires additional consent • Non disclosure/Confidentiality • Disabled person has right to request confidentiality • Reasonable adjustments can only be made within request for confidentiality MMUDisclosure guidelines & authorisation form: http://www.mmu.ac.uk/academic/studserv/learningsupport/pdf/Disclosure%20guidelines.pdf

  14. MMU Disability Equality Scheme http://www.mmu.ac.uk/humanresources/equalities/positive/index.php “MMU is working hard to embed the principles of equality and fairness into the heart of everything it does. Our equality policies and plans help set out what kind of University we want to be and how we will achieve this.” (2007) Success will: • Attract, recruit and retain students from a wide variety of backgrounds • Recruit and promote staff fairly on the basis of relevant criteria and merit • Develop an inclusive learning, teaching and working environment • Effectively tackle discriminatory practices, behaviour and language in line with the University's regulations and procedures • Following Equality Act, 2010 a Single Equality Scheme and Action Plan in December 2010.

  15. References • Equality and Human Rights Commission ( now includes Disability Rights Commission) http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/en/Pages/default.aspx • Disability Archive – University of Leeds www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies/archiveuk/ • Deegan (1992) Psychological Rehabilitation Journal, 15,p3-19 • Partners in Practice (nd) Different Differences . . . University of Bristol, University of West of England, Penninsula Medical School • www.direct.gov.uk/DisabledPeople/RightsAndObligations • www.disability.gov.uk/dda

More Related