How do disabled students feel about their time at university?
What practices and policies work and what challenges do they
encounter? How do they view staff and those providing learning
support?
This book sets out to show how disabled students experience
university life today. The current generation of students is the
first to move through university after the enactment of the
Disability Discrimination Act, which placed responsibility on
universities to create an inclusive environment for disabled
students. The research on which the book is based focuses on a
selected group of students with a variety of impairments, as they
progress through their degree courses. On the way they encounter
different styles of teaching and approaches to learning and
assessment. The diversity of their views is reflected in the issues
they raise: negotiating identities, dealing with transitions,
encountering divergent and sometimes confusing teaching and
assessment.
Improving Disabled Students Learning goes on to ask university
staff how they experience these new demands to widen participation
and create more inclusive learning climates. It explores their
perspectives on their roles in a changing university sector.
Offering insights into the workings of universities, as seen by
their central participants, its findings will be of great interest
to all practitioners who teach and support disabled students, as
well as campaigners for an end to discrimination. Crucially, it
foregrounds the views of disabled students themselves, giving rise
to a complex, contradictory and always fascinating picture of
university life from students whose voices are not always
heard.
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