[AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Dear All The Economic Times has published a survey done in the top B-Schools and found infrastructural barriers are being reduced for disabled students. But the headline ET has tagged: 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students', is little discomforting. I wonder is it really 'extra mile'? aren't they obligated to make their campuses livable for students with disabilities? Isn't our PWD Act mandates this? It does... So no charity please. I think this is the first story which highlights some figures about students with disabilities in B-Schools. Reportors deserve kudos for bringing this wonderful story to us. visit: (http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/services/education/indias-top-b-schools-go-the-extra-mile-to-help-the-differently-abled-students/articleshow/38512138.cms) if anyone finds problem in accessing this link do let me know I'll paste the content. -- Avinash Shahi M.Phil Research Scholar Centre for The Study of Law and Governance Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi India Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of mobile phones / Tabs on: http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in Search for old postings at: http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/ To unsubscribe send a message to accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in with the subject unsubscribe. To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please visit the list home page at http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in Disclaimer: 1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity; 2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent through this mailing list..
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
I am afraid, I could not get to the article. The site is not particularly easy to navigate through. -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: 17 July 2014 11:59 To: jnuvision; accessindia Subject: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Dear All The Economic Times has published a survey done in the top B-Schools and found infrastructural barriers are being reduced for disabled students. But the headline ET has tagged: 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students', is little discomforting. I wonder is it really 'extra mile'? aren't they obligated to make their campuses livable for students with disabilities? Isn't our PWD Act mandates this? It does... So no charity please. I think this is the first story which highlights some figures about students with disabilities in B-Schools. Reportors deserve kudos for bringing this wonderful story to us. visit: (http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/services/education/indias-top -b-schools-go-the-extra-mile-to-help-the-differently-abled-students/article show/38512138.cms) if anyone finds problem in accessing this link do let me know I'll paste the content. -- Avinash Shahi M.Phil Research Scholar Centre for The Study of Law and Governance Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi India Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of mobile phones / Tabs on: http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessin dia.org.in Search for old postings at: http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/ To unsubscribe send a message to accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in with the subject unsubscribe. To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please visit the list home page at http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in Disclaimer: 1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity; 2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent through this mailing list.. Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of mobile phones / Tabs on: http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in Search for old postings at: http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/ To unsubscribe send a message to accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in with the subject unsubscribe. To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please visit the list home page at http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in Disclaimer: 1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity; 2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent through this mailing list..
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has increased. This year we could fill up 10 seats out of the 12 in the DA category, he added. The Bschool has also admitted meritorious students with special needs in the general category. In 2010, IIM Bangalore installed a lift with features such as voice announcement and accessible control panel for easy access to classrooms and offices on higher floors. They installed Braille in computers and bought motorised chairs for those with locomotive disorders. Professors give me notes a day before the lecture and when there are many equations solved on the board, volunteers from other classes sit with me and explain what is being written, says C Gaurav. He is blind and made it to the 2016 batch at IIM Bangalore. IIM- B appoints readers, scribes and tutors as and when required for the 27 such students on the campus now. Newer IIMs aren't far behind. IIM Raipur, for example, gives all visually-impaired students larger hostel rooms, which they have to share with two other roommates who do not face similar needs. This was done to ensure that even if one room mate is not there, we are not alone, says Yogesh Gupta (24) from the 2015 batch. Gupta became blind in 2005 and found it difficult to learn Braille. He relies on speech software to understand notes. Gupta wants to make a career in marketing in the logistics industry. An internship with Transport CorporationBSE 1.68 % of India this year has boosted his confidence. His classmate Piyush Rakheja wants a career in finance and absence of sight holds no barrier for this commerce graduate from Kolkata. SUPPORT FROM RECRUITERS Recruiters are also doing their bit. Vodafone just recruited two management trainees with special needs from campuses out of a total of 110 management trainees. We have not yet hired students
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Hi All, Pleased to learn about this remarkable achievement. I still remember year 2000 where I actually filed law suit and outcome of that lawsuit resulted in initiations of reservation quota for disabled. I myself have not been directly benefited by this outcome but feels great that it has paved ways for many. Friends, I did not narrate this personal incident to brag about myself but rather to demonstrate a point that each one of us has potential to change the community in which we operate. I encourage you to be change agent and pave path for others. Thanks and wish you all the best in your journey of change. Asif -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2014 12:50 PM To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the disabled. Subject: Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has increased. This year we could fill up 10 seats out of the 12 in the DA category, he added. The Bschool has also admitted meritorious students with special needs in the general category. In 2010, IIM Bangalore installed a lift with features such as voice announcement and accessible control panel for easy access to classrooms and offices on higher floors. They installed Braille in computers and bought motorised chairs for those with locomotive disorders. Professors give me notes a day before the lecture and when there are many equations solved on the board, volunteers from other classes sit with me and explain what is being written, says C Gaurav. He is blind and made it to the 2016 batch at IIM Bangalore. IIM- B appoints readers, scribes and tutors as and when required for the 27 such students on
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Superb! Can you share that judgment, please? On 7/17/14, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote: Hi All, Pleased to learn about this remarkable achievement. I still remember year 2000 where I actually filed law suit and outcome of that lawsuit resulted in initiations of reservation quota for disabled. I myself have not been directly benefited by this outcome but feels great that it has paved ways for many. Friends, I did not narrate this personal incident to brag about myself but rather to demonstrate a point that each one of us has potential to change the community in which we operate. I encourage you to be change agent and pave path for others. Thanks and wish you all the best in your journey of change. Asif -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2014 12:50 PM To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the disabled. Subject: Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has increased. This year we could fill up 10 seats out of the 12 in the DA category, he added. The Bschool has also admitted meritorious students with special needs in the general category. In 2010, IIM Bangalore installed a lift with features such as voice announcement and accessible control panel for easy access to classrooms and offices on higher floors. They installed Braille in computers and bought motorised chairs for those with locomotive disorders. Professors give me notes a day before the lecture and when there are many equations solved on the board, volunteers from other classes sit with me and explain
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Though the article doesn't mention anything about IIM. Indore, yet there are number of innitiatives going on to support students with disabilities. I can prowdly say that situation has improved a lot as compared to last year when I joined here. The difference can be clearely observed in the learning patern and lifestyle of our juniors. Thanks, Ajay On 7/17/14, avinash shahi shahi88avin...@gmail.com wrote: Superb! Can you share that judgment, please? On 7/17/14, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote: Hi All, Pleased to learn about this remarkable achievement. I still remember year 2000 where I actually filed law suit and outcome of that lawsuit resulted in initiations of reservation quota for disabled. I myself have not been directly benefited by this outcome but feels great that it has paved ways for many. Friends, I did not narrate this personal incident to brag about myself but rather to demonstrate a point that each one of us has potential to change the community in which we operate. I encourage you to be change agent and pave path for others. Thanks and wish you all the best in your journey of change. Asif -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2014 12:50 PM To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the disabled. Subject: Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has increased. This year we could fill up 10 seats out of the 12 in the DA category, he added. The Bschool has also admitted meritorious students with special needs in the general category. In 2010, IIM
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Dear Ajay Why don't you share what IM Indore is doing to make reading experience better for students with disabilities? please inform us. On 7/17/14, Ajay Minocha ajayminoc...@gmail.com wrote: Though the article doesn't mention anything about IIM. Indore, yet there are number of innitiatives going on to support students with disabilities. I can prowdly say that situation has improved a lot as compared to last year when I joined here. The difference can be clearely observed in the learning patern and lifestyle of our juniors. Thanks, Ajay On 7/17/14, avinash shahi shahi88avin...@gmail.com wrote: Superb! Can you share that judgment, please? On 7/17/14, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote: Hi All, Pleased to learn about this remarkable achievement. I still remember year 2000 where I actually filed law suit and outcome of that lawsuit resulted in initiations of reservation quota for disabled. I myself have not been directly benefited by this outcome but feels great that it has paved ways for many. Friends, I did not narrate this personal incident to brag about myself but rather to demonstrate a point that each one of us has potential to change the community in which we operate. I encourage you to be change agent and pave path for others. Thanks and wish you all the best in your journey of change. Asif -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2014 12:50 PM To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the disabled. Subject: Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has
Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students'
Sorry. This article is unavailable. On 7/17/14, Ajay Minocha ajayminoc...@gmail.com wrote: Though the article doesn't mention anything about IIM. Indore, yet there are number of innitiatives going on to support students with disabilities. I can prowdly say that situation has improved a lot as compared to last year when I joined here. The difference can be clearely observed in the learning patern and lifestyle of our juniors. Thanks, Ajay On 7/17/14, avinash shahi shahi88avin...@gmail.com wrote: Superb! Can you share that judgment, please? On 7/17/14, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote: Hi All, Pleased to learn about this remarkable achievement. I still remember year 2000 where I actually filed law suit and outcome of that lawsuit resulted in initiations of reservation quota for disabled. I myself have not been directly benefited by this outcome but feels great that it has paved ways for many. Friends, I did not narrate this personal incident to brag about myself but rather to demonstrate a point that each one of us has potential to change the community in which we operate. I encourage you to be change agent and pave path for others. Thanks and wish you all the best in your journey of change. Asif -Original Message- From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2014 12:50 PM To: AccessIndia: a list for discussing accessibility and issues concerning the disabled. Subject: Re: [AI] 'India's top B-schools go the extra mile to help the differently abled students' Here you go By Devina Sengupta Anumeha Chaturvedi, ET Bureau | 17 Jul, 2014, 04.15AM IST B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs and more. MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: He often mixes up 'who' with 'how'. And, when asked for directions, he needs to look at the hand with which he eats to point towards the right direction. Apoorv Agarwal is dyslexic and has just made it to Indian Institute of Management, Raipur, acknowledging his disability for the first time during his interview there. Because of high content of lead in my blood, language comprehension gets affected, but I will manage because I need to be an example for my sister, says Agarwal. His sister too suffers from the disorder. Sai Prasad Vishwanathanan wheelchaired his way into Indian School of Business, Hyderabad, in 2010 and was hired by Deloitte. He was operated unsuccessfully for a birth condition of additional growth in spinal cord. Subsequent injuries during childhood rendered him disabled. Seventy-three such students with disabilities are now on campuses at a handful of IIMs ET spoke to for this story. There are more such heroes -- with visual, locomotive, hearing and learning disorders -- all defying life's cruel blows to make it to the IIMs. Some of them were chosen in general quota -- in some cases at the insistence of the candidate --though 3% of the seats are reserved for the disabled in IIMs. ISB did away with stairs in one of its four entrance gates enabling Vishwanathan to take the wheelchair, put a ramp around his accommodation, built a new washroom, gave him a battery-powered wheelchair that cost them Rs 1 lakh, and brought down the height of the stage on his graduating day. It touched me when ISB started making changes because it was the right thing to do and not because they could foresee numbers of students like me going up in future, says Vishwanathan. Reservation is not the answer. What we need is the right infrastructure that can make life easy, Vishwanathan said. B-schools are trying their best for their disabled students by adding voice announcement facility in lifts, providing them motorised wheelchairs, giving more time to students with learning disorders, adopting special software for the blind and encouraging volunteers to help them in their studies. Infrastructural changes have been made in class rooms and hostels, and students have been sensitised on the needs of the specially-abled. Some IIMs are also in the process of creating a special centre where the needs of the differently-abled can be discussed and met. IIM Calcutta is planning a centre for specially-abled students. With 26 such students this year (batch 2015 and 2016), it is an urgent need for the institute. IIM Kozhikode set up an audit committee last month to make infrastructural changes to cater to the needs of the differentlyabled. The institute is built on a hill, so we are reviewing the entire space, said Debashis Chatterjee, director of IIM-K. The B-school has 20 such students in the campus this year. There was difficulty in getting qualified DA students in the past. Now, the awareness has increased. This year we could fill up 10 seats out of the 12 in the DA category, he added. The Bschool