In considering the role that technology and e-learning can play in helping students access higher education and effective learning experience a large amount of the current research and practice literature focuses almost exclusively on accessibility legislation, guidelines and standards and the rules contained within them One of the major problems of such an approach is that it has drawn higher education practitioners into thinking that their objective is to comply with rules. I argue that it is not . The objective should be to address the needs of students. The danger of only focusing on rules is that it can constrain thinking and therefore practice. We need to expand our thinking beyond that of how to comply with rules, towards how to meet...
The university, as the main social space, can contribute to breaking down material and immaterial ba...
This is an applied companion to our empirical article elsewhere in this issue (Fichten et al., in pr...
The concerns raised here are further in Manifestos for the Future of Critical Disability Studies
In considering the role that technology and e-learning can play in helping students access higher ed...
Most people working within the higher education sector understand the importance of making e-learnin...
Most practitioners know that they should make e-learning accessible to students wth disabilities, ye...
Within the student groups that we work with or support it is increasingly likely that some will have...
For the past five to ten years researchers have been developing tools and guidelines for developing ...
In the United Kingdom, The 2001 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA) made it an offe...
A report on an initiative at the University of Southampton to build an online resource to help stude...
The 2001 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA) made it an offence for educational ins...
Digital inclusion in higher education has tended to be understood solely in terms of accessibility, ...
There is a widespread discourse across academic and scientific literature extolling the benefits of ...
Disability Discrimination Acts in several countries have charged those working with multimedia, hype...
This paper explores the current rising rates of online learning in higher education. It examines how...
The university, as the main social space, can contribute to breaking down material and immaterial ba...
This is an applied companion to our empirical article elsewhere in this issue (Fichten et al., in pr...
The concerns raised here are further in Manifestos for the Future of Critical Disability Studies
In considering the role that technology and e-learning can play in helping students access higher ed...
Most people working within the higher education sector understand the importance of making e-learnin...
Most practitioners know that they should make e-learning accessible to students wth disabilities, ye...
Within the student groups that we work with or support it is increasingly likely that some will have...
For the past five to ten years researchers have been developing tools and guidelines for developing ...
In the United Kingdom, The 2001 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA) made it an offe...
A report on an initiative at the University of Southampton to build an online resource to help stude...
The 2001 Special Educational Needs and Disability Act (SENDA) made it an offence for educational ins...
Digital inclusion in higher education has tended to be understood solely in terms of accessibility, ...
There is a widespread discourse across academic and scientific literature extolling the benefits of ...
Disability Discrimination Acts in several countries have charged those working with multimedia, hype...
This paper explores the current rising rates of online learning in higher education. It examines how...
The university, as the main social space, can contribute to breaking down material and immaterial ba...
This is an applied companion to our empirical article elsewhere in this issue (Fichten et al., in pr...
The concerns raised here are further in Manifestos for the Future of Critical Disability Studies