HOW TECH BRINGS SELF-RELIANCE
TO STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
Rakshit Malik, 18, has every reason
to be pleased with himself. He just scored 96.4% in his Class 12 exam -the
third-highest score in CBSE's disabled category . He treats his visual
impairment matter-of-factly: “My ability is stronger than my disability“. A
humanities student who wants to specialize in history , Malik learns by
listening.He hears the material, pauses, and assimilates it. “While we found
audio versions of NCERT textbooks in Classes 9 and 10, they are not available
for Classes 11 and 12,“ says Malik, who then used his own method. “Mama
recorded herself reading out my textbooks“.
This year, there was merely a 12-mark difference between the student who topped the disabled category and the highest scorer in the exam. In many cases, learning outcomes are aligning, and advances in assistive technology have something to do with the trend. While it is still essential to know Braille, the system of reading raised dots by touch is falling out of use in many parts of the world. In the US, fewer than 10% of the visually impaired read Braille. Now, digital screen readers and magnifiers, and text-tospeech apps make sure that a blind student and a sighted one are on the same page. “Tactile diagrams can be used to teach geography , science and other subjects that require visual aids,“ explains Nirmita Narasimhan, accessibility expert and policy director at the Centre for Internet and Society , Bangalore.
As more learning material is put
online, students have it much easier than they did a generation ago. They also
get study notes from peer-to-peer forums.
According to the 2011 census, 2.21%
of the Indian population -around 26.8 million -have some form of disability .
On paper, the state is committed to supporting these students, and to providing
aids and appliances, access to material, scribes and readers; and easing exam
processes.In practice, it is far from smooth, explains Diana Joseph of the
Fourth Wave Foundation, a Karnataka NGO that bridges the gap between government
and students with the Nanagu Shaale programme.“Each integrated education
resource trainer has to oversee 30 schools. So it's often perfunctory . For
example, they may supply hearing tools, without explaining that the battery
must be replaced.“
Over the last five years, there has
been progress in both technology and policy .Copyright restrictions have been
lifted for the use of the disabled. Textbooks have been proactively digitized.
But ultimately , success depends on the mundane but critical matter of the
right standards, explains Dipendra Manocha, who leads the DAISY for All project
in India. DAISY, or Digital Accessible Information System, is an international
standard for printed material that can be read in Braille, large print, audio,
etc on a computer or mobile phone. By contrast, something scanned as an image
file can't be read.
In collaboration with IIT, Manocha
and his colleagues have converted several state board high-school textbooks
into this format, including those of Bihar and Madhya Pradesh. They're working
on it for Rajasthan, UP and Punjab.“Many organizations are pitching in to do
this work, but it would be much easier if a clear accessibility policy was
spelt out by the HRD ministry , which would apply to all school systems,“ says
Manocha. The font must be Unicode-based, the material must be in ePub format.
Right now, local languages present a
challenge to screen-reading software, says Narasimhan. “ A basic text to speech
eSpeak engine exists for many Indian languages, but there's a lot of work to be
done to effectively deploy it. The non-adherence to Unicode, and the lack of
good optical character recognition (OCR) software also hinder the effective use
of tech in schools and jobs,“ she explains.
It isn't just about getting the
tools to students, training is also vital. “The focus in schools has been on
helping students through scribes and so on, rather than letting them manage on
their own, as employers will expect from them,“ says Manocha. There is much
more a classroom can do, to enable everyone, says Arun Mehta, disability
activist and president of the Bidirectional Access Promotion Society . He
describes three relatively cheap possible interventions: a blackboard display
with LED marquee lights, a lapel mic for the teacher and headphones for
students with partial deafness or attention deficit, and a board that vibrates
with information from a computer.
Disability is not just a medical
affliction, it is also socially constructed -it is your environment that
includes or excludes you. Technology can melt many barriers if schools and
policymakers can get their act together. Sometimes, that can make the
difference between dependence and independence.
May 29 2016 : The Times of India (Delhi)
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
May 29 2016 : The Times of India (Delhi)
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
No comments:
Post a Comment