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Designing for inclusion and the role of the disability practitioner

Designing for inclusion and the role of the disability practitioner. Caroline Davies and Tina Elliott IMPACT Associates Eileen Laycock, Disability Manager University of Westminster June 2010. We will be looking at…. What are competence standards?

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Designing for inclusion and the role of the disability practitioner

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  1. Designing for inclusion and the role of the disability practitioner Caroline Davies and Tina Elliott IMPACT Associates Eileen Laycock, Disability Manager University of Westminster June 2010

  2. We will be looking at… • What are competence standards? • Setting inclusive learning outcomes and assessment criteria • University of Westminster ICDS project – using project resources to support inclusive practices • How disability officers can work with academic colleagues to promote inclusion

  3. Competence standards • Pre-set ‘Competence Standards’ replace the ‘academic standards’ justification for discriminating against disabled students (DDA, 2006) • What are competence standards? • Will this be changed by the Equality Act?

  4. Setting standards In HE, standards are traditionally applied: • for selecting applicants at admission • when learning outcomes are set • for assessment criteria and marking • when ranking students for the conferment of awards • How does this apply to setting competence standards?

  5. A competence standard is... “an academic, medical or other standard applied by or on behalf of an education provider for the purpose of determining whether a person has a particular level of competence or ability” (DDA, Part 4 Code of Practice, 2006)

  6. 5 key characteristics They apply to individual courses, not whole subject areas They apply equally to all students not just disabled students They are set by the University/ individual Schools, and sometimes by professional bodies They must not directly discriminate against disabled people They must be a “proportionate” way of achieving a “legitimate aim”

  7. Making reasonable adjustments There is no duty to make reasonable adjustments to a standard which is defined as a competence standard. However... Universities do have a duty to make reasonable adjustments to the process of demonstrating that a disabled student or applicant is able to meet a CS.

  8. Discrimination and competence standards • When might a discriminatory competence standard be justifiable? • Avoiding discrimination by • systematic review – the University of Edinburgh’s 5 step test • transparency - publishing and publicising key course competence standards in major documents

  9. Implications of the Equality Act 2010 • Will competence standards still apply? • ECU advice is that competence standards are included in the Act and the position remains consistent with the DDA • Discrimination provisions and the ‘content of the curriculum’ exemption • Code of Practice due, January 2011

  10. Three key elements of course design • Learning outcomes • Teaching and learning methods and • Assessment criteria

  11. Learning outcomes • What are learning outcomes? • Learning outcomes – the core elements • Deciding what is core

  12. Key questions for inclusivelearning outcomes • What is the pedagogical purpose of a requirement, how does it achieve that purpose and are there other more accessible ways of achieving this?  • Is there any negative impact of the learning outcome on disabled students? • Would the learning outcome be substantially changed if a particular requirement were removed or substituted? • Have changing circumstances, practices or technology made a previous requirement in a learning outcome redundant?

  13. Example learning outcomes 1. At the end of this module the successful student will be expected to be able to make a persuasive fluent oral presentation. 2. At the end of this module the successful student will be expected to be able to access major data sources including published statistics, government surveys, on-line and CD Rom databases, and the Internet

  14. Inclusive Curriculum for Disabled Students project The ICDS project was a three-year TQEF funded programme at the University of Westminster Aim: to develop and embed university-wide approaches to inclusive curriculum design and delivery to support disabled students’ learning

  15. Objectives • Supporting staff to develop inclusive curriculum design and learning and teaching practices • Involving staff and disabled students in identifying good practice and barriers • Reviewing approaches to inclusion within curriculum validation and review • Promoting inclusive approaches that are embedded in mainstream processes and practices

  16. Key achievements • A series of focus groups with staff and disabled students • A set of Learning & Teaching Guides • Staff and student Case Studies • Four key Briefings • Dissemination activities • Strategies for course validation & review • A comprehensive website of resources • www.westminster.ac.uk/study/disability-services/inclusive-curriculum-for-disabled-students

  17. Learning & Teaching Guides • Good practice statements with quotes from staff and disabled students • 13 Learning & Teaching Guides covering: • Barriers to learning for disabled students • Recruitment, admission and induction • Lectures, seminars and tutorials • Practical-based learning • Placements and off-campus learning • Learning and teaching resources • Assessment • Validation and review, monitoring and feedback • Research programmes • Personal tutoring

  18. Case Studies • 9 case studies – 7 from disabled students and 2 from staff • Covering different learning and teaching scenarios and students with a range of impairments • Identifying barriers and looking at ways of overcoming them • Identifying transferable inclusive practice

  19. Briefings • 4 Briefings produced to complement the Learning & Teaching Guides covering the following topics: • Competence Standards • Writing Inclusive Learning Outcomes and Course Descriptions • Inclusive Employability Curriculum: Key Issues • Guidance on Validation

  20. Using project resources to support inclusive design Aim was to promote awareness of the resources and how they could be used to support inclusion • High profile Launch event • School-based meetings • Seminars for key staff, e.g. Learning and Teaching Coordinators, Disability Tutors • For all academic staff: input at Learning & Teaching Symposia at each project stage

  21. Future ICDS plans • Work with School Disability Tutors to support validation panels on some targeted courses that are coming up for revalidation • Set up a series of lunchtime “Question Time” sessions • Weave into all staff development workshops the issues of inclusive design and competence standards. This is often at the root of many of the barriers faced by disabled students

  22. Benefits of Competence Standards • If set and implemented appropriately they: • help prevent discrimination • clarify expectations and outcomes related to specific courses • help staff make consistent decisions • help disabled applicants choose a course where they can meet standards • help all students to understand what is expected of them

  23. What disability officers can do to promote inclusion • informing, influencing, collaborating • finding allies and champions • opportunities and threats • identifying target audiences • using a variety of means • validation and review activities • learning and teaching events • procedural documents • keeping inclusion on the agenda

  24. Useful resources ICDS web site Two articles ‘Designing for Inclusion’ from the Skill Journal, vol 95 2009 www.impact-associates.co.uk/publications.html University of Edinburgh - 5 step test ECU Briefing on the Equality Act www.ecu.ac.uk/publications/equality-act-2010

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