[access-uk] Making science courses accessible to visually impaired students

  • From: "Derek Naysmith" <derek.naysmith@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 07:00:27 +0100

The Science accessibility project: 


Improving Science Courses for Visually Impaired Students


 

The Open University is a distance learning institution with over 250,000
students and of these over 10,000  have declared that they are disabled or
have special additional requirements. One of the key features of the
University is that it has no entrance requirements- it is open to all. It is
possible for students to study individual courses, general degrees, specific
named degrees or undertake postgraduate studies.  The Open University is
proud of its claim to be 'Open to all'. In view of this, it has funded the
Science accessibility project to ensure that it is following best practice
to allow visually impaired students the opportunity to study Science
courses.  

 

Science subjects present many challenges for students with visual
impairments because teaching methods are based on intensive use of non-text
elements (graphs, tables, data sets, diagrams, and other visual
representations), models and practical work. Current advice and guidance for
OU staff concerned with teaching science subjects is too general and
non-subject specific to enable them to directly understand and manage the
teaching, learning and curriculum issues as they relate to visually impaired
students. 

 

The University has commissioned Dr Derek Naysmith, an independent
consultant, to undertake this study on their behalf. Derek obtained a BSc in
Applied Physics, his PhD and was a college lecturer for 6 years before
losing his sight in 1986. Since then he has obtained degrees in Computing
and Human Geography, worked as a Systems Analyst for 20 years and has been
an independent consultant for 4 years. Derek has been a trustee of the
British Computer Association of the Blind for 15 years serving as Company
Secretary for 9 and Chairman for 4. 

 

By investigating how blind and visually impaired students are best enabled
to enjoy studying and achieve learning outcomes in science subjects, the
project aims to 

            

*       determine whether the OU is providing reasonable adjustments for 

Blind/VI science students compared to other universities.

.            provide better guidance for the Science Faculty in the design
and delivery of inclusive modules and qualifications

.            Seek to ensure that visually impaired students have more
opportunities to study Science courses at the University and to ensure
appropriate support and adjustments are in place.

 

To help to achieve these objectives the University is seeking feedback from
visually impaired students who have studied Science at University/college
level.  We are also seeking information from support and academic staff who
have assisted visually impaired students to study science courses.  We want
to find out any adjustments that helped visually impaired students enjoy
their studies, any techniques or equipment that assisted students and to
find out issues that made studying difficult. To obtain this information we
would appreciate it if students or support staff could complete the
appropriate attached questionnaire.  Be assured that the information you
provide will be treated in the utmost confidence. 

 

If you wish to discuss the project with Derek Naysmith contact him via
Derek.naysmith@xxxxxxxxxxx .

Your participation in the Science Accessibility project is much appreciated
and will provide valuable information to allow us to understand how to
improve the accessibility of Open University science teaching.

 

Derek Naysmith

 

 

 

From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
ANDY COLLINS
Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 11:09 PM
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: Sluggish PC

 

Hi George - Additional memory was the first ting I thought of, but as it had
been running ok until recently, I thought more like a failing motherboard;
he doesn't have updates set to automatic, and not knowing very much, says he
clicks on know when offered updates. Like you, I'm surprised too, that it
ran on 256mb, thought XP needed at least 512, preferably higher of course.

 

Andy

----- Original Message ----- 

From: George Bell <mailto:george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>  

To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 10:14 PM

Subject: [access-uk] Re: Sluggish PC

 

Hi Andy,

 

It's a miracle it runs at all with only 256 Megs in it.

 

Is the machine connected to the internet, and set up for automatic updates
and such like?  It could well be that updates have added services and such
like pushing the memory to its absolute limits.

 

It might be worth looking into the cost of extra memory, if it's even
available now.

 

George.

 


  _____  


From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
ANDY COLLINS
Sent: 10 October 2010 20:37
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Sluggish PC

Hi all -

 

A friend is running an xp service pack 3 machine. He's sighted, and only
really a lite user. His machine only has 256mb internal memory, but was
running ok until a few months ago, when everything slowed down, and it
started taking say about 2-3 minutes for programme to load, or shut down. I
got him to do a defrag and disc clean up, and run antivirus software, but
with no improvement to his problem

 

The machine is 8 years old. Is there anything else we might consider that
could help speed it up, or is the most likely problem a failing motherboard
in an old machine?

 

Like I say, it has never been heavily used, and use to perform at a much
more acceptible pace.

 

Thanks for any ideas shared -

 

Andy

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