--- On Fri, 17/4/09, Akujo Amonye <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Akujo Amonye <[email protected]>
Subject: Fw: [email protected] has sent you a New Vision News Article!
To: "kadara kursum" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 17 April, 2009, 5:02 PM








 
We are peaceful souls.




----- Forwarded Message ----
From: New Vision Online Division <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, 17 April, 2009 17:41:18
Subject: [email protected] has sent you a New Vision News Article!


Hi there!

[email protected] thought you might be interested in this article from The 
New Vision online: http://www.newvision.co.ug

They also added this comment:
""

Children with disabilities need affirmative action 

By Hamad Lubwama

In March, I visited a number of schools in Hoima, Kapchorwa and Nebbi 
districts. The purpose was to assess how far children with physical 
disabilities can access schools and facilities in these schools. 

My findings were unsatisfactory, but I am not going on the details in this 
article. What unconsciously impressed me though was that all the head teachers 
I talked to were aware and admitted putting into practice the Universal Primary 
Education (UPE) and Universal Secondary Education (USE) policy of giving 
priority to Children with Disabilities (CWDs) by admitting them first. Quite 
impressive on paper, isn’t it?

Justine Mwesigye, the head teacher of St. Bernadette’s Model School, Hoima, 
said she admitted a child with a disability past the middle of the term. Her 
school is a model and all inclusive school with facilities to teach blind, deaf 
and children with physical disabilities. 

The school has 24 children with hearing difficulties, six with visual 
impairments and only two with mild physical disabilities. 

The school also admits ‘normal’ children. This statistics raised my concern 
about why there are very few children with physical disabilities in this 
school. 

According to UN statistics, children with physical disabilities comprise 60% of 
the total number of persons with disabilities (PWDs) in any given population. 
So I expected the number of children with movement limitations to even more 
than double the number of their blind and deaf peers. 

Many other head teachers said they admit which ever child is brought to them 
regardless of the kind of their disabilities, but they were all ignorant about 
the actual cause of poor enrolment of the biggest category of CWDs.

It is in Kapchorwa district where I found a convincing answer. “Lack of 
assistive devices to aid them (children with movement problems) to move leaves 
many at home while others go to school,” Freddy Chelimo, head teacher of 
Kapchorwa Demonstration School, a school for children with disabilities, told 
me. His school being a school for CWDs makes his answer very authentic since he 
normally interacts with these children and their parents. 

Children and adults with physical disabilities need assistive devices like 
wheel chairs, tri-cycles, calipers, clutches, and artificial legs to move. 
These devices are very expensive to a parent who many times cannot even afford 
lunch of sh500 for his child at school or even a book for sh200. 

The cost of a wheel chair made to suit Uganda’s physical environment at 
Katalemwa Cheshire Home (NGO that cares for CWDs) is sh500,000. The cheapest is 
at Mulago Orthopedic Workshop where the cost of wheelchairs range from 
sh150,000 to sh450,000). 

The cheaper wheelchairs like those at Mulago are just imported and not ideal 
for our environment, not durable and not foldable. An artificial leg costs more 
than sh500,000  and more than a million shillings for an artificial hand. 

The cost of a pair of calipers is about sh300,000. Disability is expensive, 
considering the fact that some of CWDs stay on medication for a life time to 
control their disabilities. Because parents of CWDs cannot afford the costs of 
walking aids, their children stay and get confined in homes. Those who can, 
crawl up to school — but because of difficulties associated with crawling, 
coupled with discrimination and stigmatisation, the children end up dropping 
out of schools. This could be one of the fertile causes of high drop out rates 
in UPE schools that is puzzling the Government.

CWDs need more affirmative action on addition to a policy of just giving them 
priority in admitting them to schools. 

The Government and local authorities should give them assistive devices to aid 
them in movement, hearing and seeing. The deaf, for example, need hearing aids, 
the blind need white canes. These aids are so expensive that parents alone 
cannot afford, and without them, their children can hardly go to school.

CWDs face many hardships in studying, for example, getting late to class 
because of movement limitations, hearing and visual difficulties. These 
limitations of course affect their class performance. 

Nontheless, many head teachers reported that often times some CWDs perform 
better that their able-bodied peers. But still, when it comes to enrolment in 
S.1, S.4 and tertiary institutions, CWDs could be given additional points to 
enable them make it to good or ‘first world’ schools.

Schools should also be equipped with special teaching facilities more 
especially braille for the blind and sign language interpreters for deaf 
students. Special needs teachers should also be available in every school. 

So for children with disabilities to study and grow into productive citizens, 
they should be helped financially to acquire assistive devices, make schools 
accessible, equip schools with special teaching facilities for CWDs and post 
special needs teacher(s) to every school. Education goes beyond just admitting 
children to schools.

The writer is the information officer, Uganda National Action on Physical 
Disability

You can also read the article online at: 
http://www.newvision.co.ug/detail.php?mainNewsCategoryId=8&newsCategoryId=20&newsId=678286






      
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