Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!think!mintaka!yale!bunker!hcap!hnews!101!460!Ron.Rothenberg From: Ron.Rothenberg@f460.n101.z1.fidonet.org (Ron Rothenberg) Newsgroups: misc.handicap Subject: Yet Another Small Victory Message-ID: <9426@bunker.UUCP> Date: 5 Jan 90 03:08:29 GMT Sender: wtm@bunker.UUCP Reply-To: Ron.Rothenberg@f460.n101.z1.fidonet.org Distribution: misc Organization: FidoNet node 1:101/460 - VI/BUG, Holbrook MA Lines: 45 Approved: wtm@bunker.UUCP Index Number: 6099 [This is from the Advocacy Conference] >From TOGETHER, January 1990. "WHAT IF YOU COULDN'T . . . ?" opens at Children's Museum On Jan. 19, The Children's Museum opens a new exhibit designed to help children, parents and teachers gain a better understanding of disabilities and people with disabilities. "What If You Couldn't . . .?" will deal with sensitive topics - providing simple information for children and more detailed information for older visitors. The exhibit will examine six areas: physical, learning, emotional and developmental disabilities, and visual and hearing impairments. Each area begins by describing the disability and its cause in order to dispel myths that encourage stereotypes. Children will have a chance to "experience" disabilities, for example, by maneuvering a wheelchair, trying on leg braces and walking blind-folded through a maze. Some of the equipment and techniques that help people with disabilities lead independent lives will be on display - a braille typewriter, a racing wheelchair and a talking clock. There will also be a chance to learn American Sign Language. The exhibit will also ask children to put themselves in the place of people with disabilities, think about how they would feel and point out the similarities as well as the differences. A companion photo exhibit, "My Mommie Drives a Wheelchair: Portrait of a Family," will focus on parents with disabilities. The aim is changing attitudes - changes that could mean more informed decisions by policy makers, social workers and educators who are helping people with disabilities find personal and social space to live full and productive lives. -rsr- ... There is no fate that can not be surmounted by scorn - A. Camus -- Uucp: ..!{decvax,oliveb}!bunker!hcap!hnews!101!460!Ron.Rothenberg Internet: Ron.Rothenberg@f460.n101.z1.fidonet.org