Alongside revising for a major exam this week, I've been working on getting the Disabled Students' Network set up. This is just the first of the many things I need to get done, but probably also the most critical, creating a space for us as disabled students to self-organise politically, to work and fight together to change the ways in which it's harder for us to be at university than it would be if we didn't have a disability.
For example, does it take you longer to study than everyone you know because you're in pain, or you have limited energy, or the letters move around on the page, or you have a short attention span, or you have to listen to the book, or many other things that could make it harder for someone with a disability to study?
Do you have to fit into your university schedule numerous appointments with doctors, nurses, specialists, psychiatrists, counsellors, learning support mentors etc, and still try to get everything done for the same deadlines?
Do you have days or weeks when you can't get to lectures, or when you don't have the right assistive technology available to make them accessible for you? Does this make your degree harder yet for you to complete?
Are you worried that after your degree you'll be unemployable because of your disability, and in thousands of pounds of debt?
Are you struggling with a mountain of challenges - what Disabled Students Allowance is, what Disabled Living Allowance is, how to get support with your learning, what the grounds for a medical extension are, whether you can safely go to the SU or whether the lights will make it too dangerous, how to get help with cooking, eating and personal care, how to get help with organisation and study skills, where to find a decent trustworthy doctor, where the counselling centre is, and how on earth you manage a degree on top of these worries?
The idea of the Disabled Students Network is to share support and experiences amongst students who consider themselves disabled. The working definition of that is "meet the equality act definition of disabled, have reason to access disability services whilst at uni, or self-identify as disabled" and people fit this definition with a multitude of conditions, from epilepsy to aspergers syndrome, dyslexia to ME/CFS, cancer to depression. If you don't know whether you'd belong or not, but are struggling with some of those things I listed earlier, or even if you're not but think you might fit in, then come along. It's a space open to people with disabilities of all kinds - mental health problems, learning difficulties, sensory impairments, chronic illnesses, neurological differences etc and hopefully you'll find the information you need.
Very soon, I should be able to put up an advert for the first meeting. Excited? You should be.
Sunday, 22 September 2013
Saturday, 21 September 2013
Hello all! my thoughts, happenings and first article :)
It's been a couple of months that my new role as Black and Minority Ethnic officer officially began. Much has happened since then (mainly inside my head!) that I want to tell you about: I developed ideas on how to improve the multicultural education and social integration on our campus, I discussed with and met new people, I am networking to bring inspirational BME people on campus. Last week was executive training and it helped me get a clearer idea about what I want to be campaigning and working on and what I want to see happen by the end of this year. I learned a lot about cooperation and planning work with other officers and societies. Before that I went to a really insightful and lovely event organised at UCL, to support and inform BME officers across the UK.
The main thing I am doing now is working on organising events for Black History Month. I wrote an article for the Orbital and here it is! "BLACK HISTORY MONTH: IS IT ENOUGH?" is the title, find it on this blog :).
I want to promote discussion on BME topics throughout the year, so I will keep you posted on the evolution :).
I hope you enjoy the article and you can find me on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BMERHUL and Twitter:https://twitter.com/SurhulBME if you'd like to voice your opinion!
Luisa Violet
The main thing I am doing now is working on organising events for Black History Month. I wrote an article for the Orbital and here it is! "BLACK HISTORY MONTH: IS IT ENOUGH?" is the title, find it on this blog :).
I want to promote discussion on BME topics throughout the year, so I will keep you posted on the evolution :).
I hope you enjoy the article and you can find me on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BMERHUL and Twitter:https://twitter.com/SurhulBME if you'd like to voice your opinion!
Luisa Violet
BLACK HISTORY MONTH: IS IT ENOUGH?
It would be appropriate to begin this article with complete honesty: this is an extensively broad question and does not have as straightforward an answer as one may think. It will be very difficult to answer within such a small space, but it can be seen as a first step towards open discussion throughout the coming year.
The worthiness of Black History Month (BHM) is unquestionable. It has allowed under-represented ethnic minority groups within the UK to find pride within their own heritage and historical contributions to the British culture. It has highlighted that the history taught in our primary and secondary schools is not transparent in its inclusivity and does not fully recognise the contributions of ethnic minorities to British society to the level which it should.
BHM was established in 1987 in Britain. We have certainly come a long way since refusing individuals of African and Irish descent the ability to rent a property in London. In modern Britain, we have people from ethnic minority groups occupying all levels of the social strata. They are proud to call themselves British citizens and contribute to both British culture and its history still in the making.
In light of these facts, some may question the need for a BHM at all; have we not already established the level of equality and integration of all colours and creeds the month-long event set out to promote? Certainly not fast enough. Our institutional history curricula still largely exclude the contributions of ethnic minority figures. In society today, even, the repercussions of some ignorant and outdated mentalities still affect us, creating stereotypical misconceptions and, consequently, discrimination towards ethnic minorities.
Nonetheless, we are in a position which enables us to learn from the past and influence the future by teaching ourselves and each other cultural understanding and inclusivity, rather than tolerance.
Truthfully, like with every good thing, there comes a time for reassessment and redevelopment in order to maintain a direction towards improvement. The general approach to cultural education during BHM mainly celebrates important historical figures of African descent. Nonetheless, it is far too simplistic to squeeze numerous cultures of one ethnic group under a singular umbrella definition and into one month.
Furthermore, it was the people from an array of cultural and ethnic backgrounds who devoted to the British culture and history and BHM should be a time for all peoples to recognise and learn about this. BHM should be expanded as a platform for change to build on the work done by the movements who fought early discrimination towards minorities in Britain, such as the “Self Help Movement” and every individual who contributed to evolving the British society into the state of inclusion and representation of today.
So, Black History Month is not enough. Not enough because one single month isn’t fairly representing the spectrum of ethnicities whose important figures impacted the development of the British history and society. Not enough, as these figures should be remembered and celebrated not merely for one month, but throughout the whole academic year in schools across the UK. Not enough as the equality and integration it symbolizes are yet to become ubiquitous uncontested realities in Britain.
The question should read ‘Black History Month or simply history?’ because this is ultimately what we should want. However, despite its limitations, BHM is an invaluable platform of opportunity for discussion, inclusion, cultural education and political reform which should aim at the development of a more inclusive and representative society in Britain. An opportunity to challenge and eradicate concepts which reiterate a gross separation such as, for example, the outdated and reductionist definitions of black and white. Instead we should address people by their culture of origin: for example, English, Ghanaian, Malaysian, half-Irish and half-Indian, Bangladeshi, Italian, Mexican, Jamaican, or more generically, Latino American, or of Asian, European or African descent. BHM should be an opportunity to reclaim the value of recognising the individuals beyond their ethnicity.
Until British history and, indeed, American and worldwide history are equally representative of all the ethnicities who contributed to its progress, we need Black History Month. This is until history is defined as neither black nor white, but purely history.
LUISA VIOLET BORDOLI
LUISA VIOLET BORDOLI
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
Exec Training and the next year
I'm in exec training at the moment, and I'm certainly getting to know the other officers better
One of the exercises we've had to do is plan out the next year and how we're going to do everything we've committed to. Now, I really want Liberation Week to happen and will work towards that with Violet, Vic and Jack, but this is just the list of things from my manifesto - so here's what I'll be up to all year (alongside my degree):
If you want to help, tweet me on @SURHULDisabled or find me on Facebook or email surhuldisabled[@]gmail.com
One of the exercises we've had to do is plan out the next year and how we're going to do everything we've committed to. Now, I really want Liberation Week to happen and will work towards that with Violet, Vic and Jack, but this is just the list of things from my manifesto - so here's what I'll be up to all year (alongside my degree):
If you want to help, tweet me on @SURHULDisabled or find me on Facebook or email surhuldisabled[@]gmail.com
Action
|
Persons responsible
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What to do
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Deadline
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Elections
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|||
NO stickers for elections
|
Elections officer
Singh re budgeting
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Arrange a meeting between myself and those people, propose the idea,
discuss budgeting
|
When are the next elections? Find out when they are and do that
|
Election tshirts replaced with sashes
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Elections officer
Singh
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Note: possibly the t-shirts have already been ordered so it might
need to be put in place sooner
|
When are the next elections? Before then
|
Campaign-free routes
|
Elections officer
Singh
|
Sit down in a meeting with them with a campus map and highlight
routes around campus so students can get everywhere without them
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Before the next elections
|
Safety
|
|||
Mobility impaired students and Sshh bus currently as well as the future
|
Venue managers
Who organises the Sshh buses? Speak to them
Sidonie
College re Sshh bus funding
|
Arrange a meeting, and discuss a plan – can a security staff member
accompany or help them home? Are there accessible taxis locally? Ring all the
taxi companies to find out.
For the future speak to the college about how they fund the Sshh bus scheme and where they get the buses from
Discuss how we could get an adapted minibus
|
As soon as possible
|
Bad weather plan for mobility impaired students, so someone can call
them and check on them
|
Educational support office
Sidonie
Whoever runs the volunteering scheme
|
Contact the ESO and discuss this with them, especially for a list of
mobility impaired students, contact all those students and see whether any of
them want it, once we have a list of people that want to have the service,
speak to whoever runs the volunteering scheme to see if volunteers can be up
for it, organise it in terms of having it set up
|
Beginning of November – before the cold weather sets in
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Mental health first-aider training
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Sidonie
RAG chair
Venue manager
Performance society presidents
|
Research how much it costs, speak to Sidonie and RAG chair about
fundraising for it, organise a fundraising event and see if performance
societies are willing to perform at it
|
End of my term
|
Campaigns
|
|||
Mental health week panel
|
Sidonie
Jamie
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Discuss what night we could do it
Organise a room
Find a panel of students with different mental health problems
willing to discuss them
Design posters advertising it
|
Mental health week – when is it?
|
Two week wait
|
Jamie
Sidonie
Counselling service at college
Find out who funds them and that person
|
Speak to the counselling service to see whether they can currently do
this
If they can’t discuss how they could, how many more counsellors they’d
need
Speak to college about getting that many more counsellors and how
much it’d cost
Lobby college for the extra funding using statistics of students with
mental health problems
If college refuse look into how we can campaign further to convince
them
|
End of my term
|
Campus access audit
|
College – who is at the top in terms of venue management
Educational support office
Disabled students network
|
Discuss the cost of getting a professional access audit that we could
then advertise online
If we can’t afford that then work with the disabled students network
to divide campus up and discuss a rating scheme
|
End of my term
|
Disabled Students Allowance campaign
|
Jamie
Educational Support Office
|
Research how to apply for it, what paperwork is needed, how it works
Design posters that explain it with a point of contact for applying
for it
Have an event of some kind in which it’s discussed and disabled
students talk about how it’s benefited them – the ESO might recommend
students who are willing to
Produce a leaflet about it
|
End of my term
|
The community
|
|||
Find out what’s happening to local Mental Health services
|
Jamie
Sidonie
Health centre? Internet?
Local groups for people with MH problems
|
Be willing to work with other organisations in the local area on this,
and find out what’s already happening
Raise awareness of the cuts if they’re happening
If there is no response yet, look at the kind of protest that could
be arranged
|
End of my term, any major government bills relating to this
|
Engaging with the local community relating to cuts in Englefield
Green and Egham to health services
|
Contact Save Our Services in Surrey
Other community groups
|
Speak to these groups
If any kind of protest is being organised look into coaches or
similar
If there are major cuts and there is no protest, look into organising
one
|
End of my term, any government bills
|
Accessible shower space
|
The Village
ESO
|
Contact the ESO and find out whether there are students with mobility
impairments not currently living in adapted housing, and whether this might
ever be wanted
Speak to The Village about their shower space, how much it costs to
use, whether students could use it for free, timings
Organise for the ESO to advertise this possibility for students who
might require it
|
End of my term
|
Sports
|
|||
Accessible sports teams
|
Sports officer
Person in college responsible for sports funding
Ian
|
Speak to the college about the need for disabled students to have
access to sports
Explain the lack of demand and the difficulty of setting up our own
teams because of the variety of adapted sports and number of students
Look at what local accessible sports teams exist and how we could get
students to them in terms of adapted transport
Suggest costings to the college and how important this is, and press
them for funding
|
The end of my term
|
Casual sport
|
Ian
Sports Officer
|
Discuss the viability of sports teams offering to facilitate
occasional casual sessions for students who aren’t so good at sport but want
to do some for fun
Organise and advertise these
|
End of my term
|
BUCS and adapted sports
|
Hannah Paterson
Daryl Jones
|
Speak to Hannah about relevant contacts she might have and what’s
happening with this
Contact BUCS and ask what the current situation is
Act from there
|
End of my term
|
The Union
|
|||
Quiet room during union nights
|
Sidonie
Venue manager
Security manager
|
Organise the meeting and explain why this would be useful or
necessary for disabled students
Discuss potential challenges and trial it
|
End of my term
|
Safe areas for mobility impaired students during union nights
|
Sidonie
Venue manager
Security manager
|
Explain why this is needed in terms of the crush
Look at the SU and which areas are easy to get to, easy to section
off and might be useful
Discuss potential challenges and trial it
|
End of my term
|
Access information for union nights
|
Venue manager
DJs
Tech crew
Disabled students network
|
Find out what things the disabled students network think are
important to know before venue nights
Discuss with the venue manager, tech crew and DJs how these things
are planned and how far in advance
Design a sheet that can be filled in with ticks or whatever
symbolising what will be present, eg strobe lights, fast moving lights, high
volume music, more or less full venue, other things added or removed
Discuss how to make it policy that that sheet is displayed at the
point that tickets go on sale on and offline so disabled students can be
prepared for the venue night
|
End of my term
|
General meetings with access breaks every 90 minutes
|
This is in progress and the
motion will be ready for the first general meeting
Union Chair
|
Discuss this with Alex Cadier
Write a motion on why this is important
Write a speech explaining this
Have a vote
|
First general meeting of the year
|
The University
|
|||
Lecture notes and recordings
|
Educational services
VPs of the university in charge of education
Deans of departments
|
Explain why this is important, whether it’s recordings, transcripts
or notes
Explain how this would help students to learn
Discuss ways of preventing it stopping students attending lectures
Contact other universities that already do this to see whether it’s
affected their lecture attendance
|
End of my term
|
Founders’ Library access campaign
|
Sidonie
Whoever Sid tells me to speak to
|
Find out what’s happening so far with the Founders’ Library access
campaign
Support and continue to look for ways of making it more accessible to
mobility impaired students
|
End of my term
|
Avoiding students as learning support mentors where people want
|
ESO
Disabled students network
|
Discuss this with the disabled students network to see where it’s a
problem and if it’s a problem for disabled students
Explain to the ESO why it is (if it is) – patronising, risk of friends of friends, not wanting other students
to know about their issues, wanting the choice to have someone separate from
the student community
|
End of my term
|
Benefits pack
|
ESO
|
Research the benefits disabled students might be entitled to
Produce a leaflet about this
Ask the ESO to distribute it
|
End of my term
|
Spaces
|
|||
Disabled Students’ Network
|
Sidonie
ESO
Whoever does room bookings
|
Book a room for an evening the week after welcome week
Advertise through the ESO
Make posters
Ensure that as many students of all years as possible know it exists,
and ensure that they also know who has the right to attend
Try and bring tea and biscuits and discuss when would be a convenient
time and week for this to meet fortnightly
|
As soon as possible
|
Disabled Students’ Facebook group
|
ESO to advertise
|
This is already set up and needs to be advertised
|
-
|
Disabled Students’ Officer Facebook page, twitter, etc
|
ESO to advertise
|
This is already set up and needs to be advertised
|
-
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