Today is Wednesday, September 08, 2010   
  
 
 
 
   

NEWS

The School Year’s Best of the Best  
Together and by Association  
Benildeans in the Spotlight  
Charles Huang Conference Center Turnover to DLS-CSB  
Ask Anything  
Benildeans in Warsaw!  
Centennial Countdown  
For International Students  
Best of Benilde  
The Blazer’s Achievements  
Talents Ruled in Lasallian Arts Month  
Ask Anything: Dean Benhur Ong  
DLS-CSB Rocks d’Vote  
Ask Anything – Ms. Leticia Delarmente  
International Award for Young People Now in the Philippines  
DLS-CSB Signs MOA with CCP  
Brother Superior Visits the Philippine District  
Benildeans in the Spotlight – February 2010  
Ask Anything – Engr. Ma. Luisa Valdez  
Learning Resource Center Acquires New Journals  
DLS-CSB Signs Another MOA, This Time With Seton Hall University  
Blessing of the School of Design and Arts Chapel  
Perspective November 09 Ask Anything  
Benildeans in the Spotlight  
DLS-CSB Organizes Centennial Seminars  
Deaf Festival Best of 15 Years  
DLS-CSB Signs MOU with University of New South Wales  
Hear a Deaf’s Speech  
Ask Anything  
Accessibility and Inclusion: Lessons from Riku Virtanen  
Mainstreaming Deaf Education  
Becoming a Brother to All  
Benilde vs. Benilde  
SMIT Dean receives CHED Appointment  
DLS-CSBAA joins the 4th Bayani Challenge  
Br. Victor A. Franco FSC on Being a Lasallian Administrator  
Tuition Fee Payment   
DLS-CSB visit to RIT-NTID  
Benildeans in the spotlight!  
SMIT partners with U21Global  
The Dawn of a New Benilde  
Ask Anything  
Restructuring for the Mission  
Ask Anything Campaign: Dr. Merlinda Bucad on Tuition Fee Increase  
Spotted!  
Benilde Offers Three New Degree Programs  
Education for Children in Need of Special Education  
Br. Andrew Gonzalez FSC  
Helping Secure the Future of Soldiers’ Children  
Best of Benilde 2008  
20 years and counting  

Accessibility and Inclusion: Lessons from Riku Virtanen
Reports by Ana Kristina Arce and Romeo Catap, Jr.

    Finnish human rights lawyer and activist Riku-Heikki “Riku” Virtanen visited the College last June 30, 2009 to give on accessibility and inclusion talk to DLS-CSB administrators, faculty, staff and students, as well as students from the Philippine School for the Deaf. Hard of hearing and blind, Virtanen, with assistance from his two Finnish interpreters, shared his thesis work on “Right to work—about reasonable accommodation and about equality between disabled entrepreneurs and disabled workers.”

The Making of a Deafblind Lawyer
    Virtanen was born deaf and blind, but not fully impaired. Regardless of his condition, Virtanen’s parents did their best to raise him.
    His father communicates using his voice and occasionally uses finger spelling. By age 16, Virtanen started to wear cochlear implants. He has later on benefited from Finnish interpreters, who provided him assistance in contact signing and voice interpreting.
    He pursued schooling. But upon reaching secondary school, he was only offered to pursue a vocational or livelihood program although he could use a computer and communicate in Swedish and Finnish through contact signing interpreters.
    It was because of such a negative attitude towards disabled people that made him decide to break expectations, strive to study academic courses, and pursue a law degree.
    At age 21, he entered the University of Turku. The university allowed him access to assistance services, including interpreters, during standard examinations and computer laboratory classes. The university even extended his school hours.
    He admits, however, that he was able to accomplish so much because the Finnish government has firm policies that supported education for disabled people. Not only did Virtanen get his education for free, buildings and transportation in Finland are also accessible for People with Disabilities (PWD’s).
    Virtanen has since graduated from the University of Turku with a Masters of Law degree and is planning on taking the licensure examination on constitutional rights and services for PWD’s. He is also planning on pursuing a doctorate degree in the near future and on becoming a politician to help create laws for PWD’s needs for accessibility and inclusion.

It is ability that matters, not disability.
    Virtanen told the audience, which was composed mostly of Deaf students, that it is not important how he became disabled. What is important is that he was able to maximize his potentials.
    While he had a lot of help from strong Finnish policies supporting PWD’s, he shares that discrimination against PWD’s is generally high in Finland. Even though media downplays it, PWD’s are consistently struggling to earn respect. He notes that among PWD’s, the blind seem to have a better edge of getting a job compared to Deaf people.
    This fact holds true even in the Philippine setting where most jobs are limited to hearing people, and PWD’s have the least consideration for acceptance.
    While it is seriously difficult, Virtanen’s own inspirational journey proves that it can be done. As a lawyer, he campaigns for better laws and policies on accessibility and inclusion for PWD’s. This is a campaign that he not only conducts in his country, but brings to other countries as well.

Accessibility and Inclusion in the Classroom
    For DLS-CSB, Virtanen recommends that the College should consider accessibility and inclusion because education is very important for PWD’s future careers.
    According to the United Nations Convention, PWD’s have the right to be provided access to assistance service like professional sign language interpreters, information communications, buildings, education, and more. Virtanen said, “Unfortunately, it is still not enough, unless human rights are useful as possible. The government should also give more accessibility with information like reproduction, education and many [sic] other opportunities for PWD’s.”
    Pursuing and furthering these rights through an educational institution, such as DLS-CSB, is a good reason of hope that in the near future, our own government would see, understand, and give better accessibility and inclusion for PWD’s.
    Accessibility and Inclusion: Lessons from Riku Virtanen was held in the Augusto-Rosario Gonzalez Theater.

 
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