Exclusion to Inclusion

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Exclusion to Inclusion: The UK experience of accessibility Joint Information Systems Committee Lawrie Phipps JISC Programme Manager Users and Innovation [email protected]

description

A presentation to the Surf Foundation and Handicappe de Studie in Utrecht

Transcript of Exclusion to Inclusion

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Exclusion to Inclusion:The UK experience of accessibility

Joint Information Systems Committee

Lawrie Phipps JISC Programme Manager

Users and Innovation

[email protected]

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15th March 2007

About this presentation Defining accessibility The history of the UK’s route to accessibility The JISC response to the need for the

supporting of disabled students The reaction to legislation The evolution of an approach to accessibility in

e-learning What we learnt, what were our mistakes, what

would we do different

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What do mean by accessibility Accessibility is about removing barriers

to participation

However, beware of a “one size fits all” approach

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Timeline 1995: The Disability Discrimination Act covers the rights of disabled people in:

Employment Housing Goods and Services

Education was not included in the original legislation

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Post 1995 The introduction of the Disability Rights

Commission "A society where all disabled people can participate

fully as equal citizens"

The introduction of the Human Rights Act Which guarantees education for all

The issue of access to education for disabled people had to be addressed.

The result was the introduction of the Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (2001)

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The legislation - some key elements

Less Favourable Treatment

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The legislation - some key elements

Reasonable Adjustment

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The legislation - some key elements

Anticipation

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JISC and Disability 2001, JISC creates a service to advise

colleges and universities on how to support students on issues of technology and disability

TechDis

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TechDis TechDis www.techdis.ac.uk

Covers the UK in all post 16 education

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So what happened next…

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An unfortunate meeting 2002 TechDis meet with

several disability ‘lobby/pressure’ groups

Almost all of them only deal with a single issue

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The outcome of the meeting

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Why was this a mistake? Legislation does not mention specific

guidelines or standards. UK legislation relies on interpretation, the spirit

of the UK law should be the primary concern: The principle behind the legislation is that disabled people should have the same opportunities as non-disabled people to benefit wherever possible from whatever education or other related provision is available.

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The standards approach 2001, 2002: We (me, TechDis other

Advisory Bodies, UKOLN, CETIS etc) advised Universities and Colleges to use the W3C guidelines as a standard

(AA ‘compliance) All major education bodies responded,

strategically and operationally.

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A reasonable question What was the best approach for the

most students? Why were pushing a ‘standard’ that

served less than 1000 HE students? Were we excluding some disabled

people by the approach we recommended?

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Exclusive approach! The recommendations we issued served

most effectively ~ 1000 disabled HE students

They were not useful for more than 150,000 disabled students

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Opening the debate Kelly B, Sloan D and Phipps L (2003) Ideology

Or Pragmatism? Open Standards And Cultural Heritage Web Sites

Why should public libraries and museums only support wheelchair access or blind people

Should the Van Gough museum be closed because it is all visual media?

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Articulating the standards problem Kelly, B., Phipps, L. and Swift, E (2004)

Developing A Holistic Approach For E-Learning Accessibility , Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology

Stating the problems with existing standards How do we build a digital resource for both

blind and deaf? And then for students who have special

educational needs?

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Challenging the establishment Kelly, B., Sloan, D., Phipps, L., Petrie, H. and

Hamilton, F. (2005) Forcing Standardization or Accommodating Diversity? A Framework for Applying the WCAG in the Real World

Was critical of the W3C approach Received ‘letters’ in the press and personally

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Suggesting a third way Kelly, B., Phipps, L. and Howell, C. (2005)

Implementing A Holistic Approach To E-Learning Accessibility Paper published in the ALT-C 2005 Conference Proceedings

Recognises that accessibility is not black and white

Proposes a framework for supporting a diverse range of learners, including those with disability, of differing ethnicity, with religious commitments and ‘Normal’!

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2005 Building of a complete set of resources

around good practice in learning Not standards based Example resources in word, excel, html,

flash, Lego, PAPER! Some examples

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Doing it all again? What would I (we) do different?

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Use the Community We had isolated groups of people that

had no way of communicating Let them build the capacity Emerge

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Engage with academia from the beginning

Academics like academics They are in their jobs because of the

way they think, think on that level Write papers in their journals Present at their conferences Ask them to evidence their practice

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Listen to student voices Gather student data, let them record

their experience, blog, podcast… Do a weekly podcast with a student? These voices, telling their experiences,

are powerful. Use them with all levels, Government, Academia, Public.

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Advocate for Staff Understand the pressure that academics

are under and empathise Don’t sympathise I know how you feel, I felt the same way,

what I found was… Not, I know how you feel, it’s terrible but

we have to do it…

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Finally I would spend more

time in Utrecht

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Questions and thank you