Impairment no impediment for this teenager

Stuti Shukla : Mumbai, Sun Jul 07 2013, 02:05 hours


Audio-graphs that can represent actual data-graphs are one of the many
technological wonders that a group of blind students learnt about from a
Delhi-based teenager this weekend. On his way to Stanford University to
pursue a bachelor's degree in computer science, 18-year-old visually
impaired Kartik Sawhney inspired at least 20 blind students to pursue maths
and science, in a two-day workshop that ended Saturday.



Organised by Xavier's Resource Centre for the Visually Challenged (XRCVC)
of St Xavier's College, the workshop was an informative session for parents
of blind children and mainstream teachers, making them aware of the
technological facilities that make pursue maths and science. It was a part
of the Math and Science Access project that seeks to bring latest
international research and development to blind students in India.



Dr Sam Taraporewala, director of the institute, said till a few years ago,
most educational boards did not have provisions to allow visually
challenged students to pursue these subjects. "Most blind students are
discouraged from studying maths beyond class seventh. Even for class X
exams, their maths syllabus is that of class seventh. This is unfortunate
because the aptitude and interest for maths and science is as prevalent
among the blind and low vision students as the sighted," said Taraporewala.



Lack of information about how these subjects can be studied and taught to
blind and low vision students and apathy on part of educational boards and
institutions has stopped most of them from chasing their dream, he added.



Kartik was one of the few who decided to fight it out and with the help of
XRCVC, made the CBSE include a provision that would enable blind people to
appear for written and practical exams. Despite scoring 96 per cent in
class 12, Kartik was denied admission to a UG course in computer science in
any of the IITs, reportedly because of his disability. He then applied to
and got through Stanford.



Source link -
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/impairment-no-impediment-for-this-teenager/1138597/
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