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Thanks Malcolm and Faye 

 

I am not having a go at people because they work hard and may get
overwhelmed by it.  But, as I said, I see some dyslexics whose
universities have not provided the one-to-one support that they were
entitled to.  The resource-led model (i.e., the disability support team)
cannot meet every dyslexic's needs if those needs extend to specified
support hours that exceed the team's capacity to respond, unless the
team expands. 

 

An ex-PGCE student (of mine) got through his probationary teaching year
by the skin of his teeth but the school will not employ him because he
is making too many mistakes in English.  He attended a Midlands
university, got no one-to-one support, and did not acquire the skills
that might have made him more employable. In this instance he could have
done with more time (his 3 years at university) to enable him to become
competent in using the gismos.  

 

That is not right.

 

Lloyd 

 

________________________________

From: Discussion list for disabled students and their support staff.
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Malcolm Brown
Sent: 07 September 2007 10:21
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: dyslexic support tutor

 

I tend to side with Lloyd on this. Although I have often said, like
Faye, "they are adults you know" there are some students who do not seek
help when they should. Having a named Dyslexia Tutor who contacts them
occasionally to see how they are progressing and who often gets them
through a difficult patch does, I am sure, help to reduce the drop-out
rate. Also, we all know students who believe, mistakenly in some cases,
that the computer & gismos they receive under the DSA will overcome
their difficulties without the support of a Dyslexia Tutor. Most will,
no doubt, get their degree but do we not have a responsibility to the
public purse to see that the DSA is not wasted? I'm not sure about the
last bit myself.

Malcolm

 

________________________________

From: Discussion list for disabled students and their support staff.
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Faye Langston
Sent: 06 September 2007 11:54
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: dyslexic support tutor

 

 

Unfortunately with over 600 Dyslexics we are unable to maintain regular
contact and as all students are essentially adults operating within HE
we provide them with all the information they need but ultimately need
them to come in and book an appointment for tuition...if they do not
then that is their problem frankly! 

________________________________

From: Discussion list for disabled students and their support staff.
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Lloyd G. Richardson
Sent: 05 September 2007 15:29
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: dyslexic support tutor

Thank you Faye

 

Our dyslexia support is pro-active; we do not 'tell students how to
access support' and wait for them to come...our tutors maintain contact
with students and ensure that regular support sessions are provided.  We
do not feel that we are qualified to judge whether or not individuals
should have one-to-one support; if it has been recommended we provide
it.  Since some of our students are profoundly dyslexic they do require
help throughout their courses to 'sustain them'.  That does not mean
that we are failing to help them to 'assist themselves'; it is a tacit
recognition that such help (for some) needs to be on-going.

 

Lloyd

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

From: Discussion list for disabled students and their support staff.
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Faye Langston
Sent: 05 September 2007 14:31
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: dyslexic support tutor

 

just replying to one or 2 elements of this:

 

  ' Our commitment is to ensuring that every dyslexic student who has
been recommended for one-to-one tutorial support actually gets it.  I
know that this student-centred (rather than resource-centred) approach
is rare, at least in the Midlands.  We continue to get dyslexic PGCE
students who tell us that they did not have any regular one-to-one help
at university, even though their Assessment Centre reports had
identified and quantified the need.  I was told by a former colleague in
an Assessment Centre that some university disability teams were
requesting that they did not recommend specific tutorial support hours
for dyslexic students, no doubt to avoid the predicament of which you
speak. ' 

 

 

 I am from a Midlands University who also operates on a student-centred
approach (and most do in my opinion!). Often we find that no matter how
often we tell students how they can access our tuition they simply do
not. It is also becoming a 'standard' for assessments to recommend
tuition for EVERY Dyslexic student when many do not need it nor want it.
Tuition should be a tool to self-help not something that sustains a
student throughout their course as they should be working with the tutor
to find strategies to assist themselves.

 

Faye

 

Faye Langston
Disabilities Co-ordinator
Coventry University
Priory Street
Coventry
CV1 5FB

02476 888309
[log in to unmask]


  

 

 

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