Sensory & Physical Impairments
This topic covers children with visual impairment, hearing impairment, and locomotor (physical/orthopaedic) impairment. Visual impairment ranges from low vision to blindness. Classroom accommodations include seating the child near the board, large-print or high-contrast materials, reading text aloud, tactile and audio resources, and Braille and screen-reader software for children who are blind. Hearing impairment ranges from partial hearing loss to deafness. Accommodations include seating the child where they can see the teacher's face and lips clearly, facing the class while speaking (never talking while writing on the board), speaking clearly without exaggeration, using plenty of visual aids, written instructions, and sign language or an interpreter where needed. Locomotor impairment affects movement of limbs or body (for example a child who uses a wheelchair, crutches, or has cerebral palsy affecting mobility). Accommodations are largely about physical access and barrier removal: ground-floor or ramp access, wide aisles, an accessible toilet, a desk at the right height, and assistive devices such as wheelchairs, crutches or modified writing aids. The inclusive mindset is the social model of disability: the disability is created largely by barriers in the environment (stairs, tiny print, a teacher who turns away), so the teacher's duty is to remove those barriers and provide reasonable accommodation, a right under the RPwD Act 2016.
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Four ways of placing children with special needs
| Segregation | Children with disabilities taught SEPARATELY in special schools |
|---|---|
| Integration / Mainstreaming | Child placed in regular school but must ADJUST to fit it |
| Inclusion | Regular school ADAPTS itself to fit every child; all learn together |
| RPwD Act 2016 | 21 disabilities; right to free education ages 6-18; reasonable accommodation |
Specific Learning Disabilities (NOT low intelligence)
| Dyslexia | Difficulty with READING (decoding words, spelling) |
|---|---|
| Dyscalculia | Difficulty with MATHS (numbers, calculation) |
| Dysgraphia | Difficulty with WRITING (handwriting, letter formation) |
| Key fact | SLDs occur in children of average or above-average intelligence |