Greater calls are being made for there to be more national support and inclusiveness for gifted people and those with disabilities.
Last Thursday, the UWI School of Education hosted an Exceptionalities Awareness Open Day, where students and local NGOs partnered together to educate the public about identifying, aiding and understanding persons with exceptionalities.
The students of the post-graduate course, Nature and Needs of Exceptionalities, did not hold back from providing detailed information on various categories of exceptionalities such as autism, physical and learning disabilities and those that are gifted.
Co-coordinator and lecturer, Dr Elna Carrington-Blaides said people who are considered ‘different’ is part of UWI’s philosophy and the event is one that students remember and love the most.
Guardian Media Ltd spoke with education specialist, Dr Joan Bobb-Ward, who spoke openly on the needs which still needed to be addressed on a national level.
“My research indicates that enough is not being done. In fact, very little is being done because special needs education and inclusive education and inclusion involve the whole society. It’s not just for students who are studying this in a university classroom. The whole society needs to understand about disabilities, needs to understand what inclusion is and needs to respect persons with disabilities more,” Bobb-Ward said.
At the event, founder of the Caribbean Gifted and Talented Foundation, Nubia Williams, spoke fondly of her brother, Atiba, who is gifted, which she said motivated her choice to study and bring awareness of gifted people to more people.
“He started playing the steel pan when he was 18 months old and he had perfect pitch. Call the notes that he heard, from the humming of an AC unit or if he heard a vehicle passing, the car horn or even if there were notes that were in discord, not in harmony with each other. He will be able to call the notes of an engine in the sequence, from the loudest to the notes that are very very silent to the average person,” Williams said.
Williams said while there have been opportunities to have meetings with those on the executive level such as the Ministry of Education, she believes that it is still not enough.
“We really want to make some strides into really ensuring that all children are catered to regardless of their ability in a real meaningful type of way,” Williams added.
For post-graduate student Kamla Mohammed, her choice to specialise in the field of special education was also personal.
Mohammed has two young sons with autism and knows first-hand that it is not something that they can “just grow out of.”
“My experience with autism was one that was a bit frustrating at times, but I would also say it has been my greatest teacher, my children are my greatest teachers,” Mohammed said.