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Students With Disabilities
introducing the students
with disabilities campaign |
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The Campaign involves a wide variety of students
who feel they have some kind of disability.
Examples are given below, but it all depends on
whether the student personally feels that their
situation counts as a disability (self-defines):
- physical and sensory disabilities, such as the
use of a wheelchair or crutches, impairment or loss
of hearing or vision;
- specific learning difficulties such as dyslexia,
ADHD or autism;
- long-term medical conditions such as asthma,
diabetes, epilepsy, chronic fatigue syndrome, MS or ME;
- mental ill health including depression
- and, to a certain extent, HIV/AIDS.
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The Campaign holds a national Conference once a
year where they elect an SWD Committee and a full-time
SWD Officer. |
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Campaigning activities, such as national
demonstrations, events and training,
are open to any students to help out. The Conference,
however, is only open to students who
self-define as having some kind of disability, and the
motions passed at the Conference become the policy of
the SWD Campaign and shapes the work that they do for
the rest of the year.
The campaign believes that Students with
Disabilities face attitudinal and social barriers
to full inclusion on a daily basis and there must
be a continuous struggle for equality. Lack of access
denies disabled people opportunities in education,
employment, leisure, housing and even voting in local
and general elections - activities most people take
for granted. |
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Facts about Disability in Britain
- There are 10 million disabled adults in Great
Britain covered by the Disability Discrimination
Act, over one in five of the adult population.
- Since 1990, in this country, 682 individual
disabled people have lost their lives because of disablism.
That is, they have been deliberately killed just because
they were a disabled person.
- In summer 2003 only 49% of disabled people of
working age were in work, compared to 81% of non-disabled
people in work.
- By the time they are 30, 1 in 3 disabled people
in a recent survey expected to be earning less than
other people their age.
- 22% of disabled respondents in a recent survey have
experienced harassment in public in relation to their
impairment.
- One in eight young disabled people (13%) said they
had been turned down for a paid job and told it was for
a reason related to their disability.
- Only 18% of people with mental illness are employed.
- Under half of all pubs and clubs have an accessible
toilet. From 1 October 2004, the Disability Discrimination
Act means that venues will have to remove physical barriers
to disabled people.
- Only 42% of disabled people of working age are in
employment compared to 81% of non-disabled people of
working age.
- Of the 2.4 million disabled people on state benefits
and not in work nearly 1 million would like to work.
- Fewer than 1 in 10 people with a severe learning
disability are in work.
- Disabled people are 4 times more likely to suffer
sexual abuse.
- Only 3% of women with a learning disability get
screenings for cervical cancer.
- Barriers to education mean that disabled people are
more than twice as likely as non-disabled people to
have no formal academic or vocational qualifications
- On average one in four of us will experience a mental
health problem in the course of a year.
- In a recent survey, 70% had experienced discrimination
in response to their own mental distress or in response to
that of a relative or friend.
- 55% of those with mental illness couldn't bring
themselves to tell colleagues about their experience of
mental distress.
- More than four in ten people have no regular contact
with a disabled person.
- There are over one million disabled people who
want to work but don't have a job.
- A 2002 National Audit Office report identified
that an 18 year old with a disability or other health
problem is only 40% as likely to enter higher education
as an 18 year old without a disability or other health
problem
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Disabled people have been campaigning for civil
liberties legislation for decades, and SWD students
have been actively involved in this campaign.
We obtained the first real meaningful disability
legislation with the Disability Discrimination Act
1995 (DDA) which has now been amended with by the
Special Educational Needs Disabilities Act 2001 (SENDA),
which includes Post 16 Education Providers for the first
time.
A Social Model
The legislation, however, is not perfect. The DDA
unfortunately judges us not by what we can do but
by what we can’t (Medical Model) and reform of this
Act is a priority. We are calling for civil liberties
legislation that gives us true equality. Within NUS we
believe in the Social Model of Disability, which
says that the problems of disability come from the attitudes
of society, rather than because of the disabled person
(as the DDA maintains). We campaign to get the Social Model
to be universally accepted in our society.
Attitudes
Perhaps the greatest barrier that students with
disabilities face on a daily basis, is the attitude
of other people and the stigma of being disabled.
There is a great deal of misunderstanding and confusion
surrounding disabilities, and there is often also
stigma attached to ‘coming out’ as a disabled student,
either at university or college, or in the family or
workplace. A vital part of the SWD Campaign is
devoted to educating those students who do not
self-define as having a disability. We campaign to
remove the stigma from all disabilities, and to
encourage all members of our society to take a
positive attitude towards understanding the nature
of disability and over-coming prejudices.
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Visibility
A frequent misunderstanding about the SWD campaign
is the issue of what a disability is. It’s easy to
stereotype disabled students as those with obvious
physical disabilities, but often disabilities can be
just as severe, but less obvious. The issue of mental
health is an example of such a disability that wouldn’t
be visible to a casual observer. The SWD campaign works
hard to raise awareness of the different forms of disability,
and to encourage society to bear in mind less obvious
disabilities when promoting diversity and access.
Inclusion and Involvement
The key effect of the stigmas and attitudinal problems
attached to disability is a lack of involvement of
students with disabilities in student life and students’
unions. As a strong supporter of the Social Model of
disability, the NUS SWD Campaign believes that it is the
fault of society and institutions that disabled people are
oppressed. As such, we believe that the burden of action
falls upon students’ unions in increasing students with
disabilities’ involvement in their union. The SWD campaign
works hard to encourage students’ unions to actively
involve students with disabilities
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