Disabilities continued from page 1 “I think her feeling was that she had done so much accommodating, she [felt] she was being taken ad vantage of,” she said. But Minchella, who has now earned all his credits for gradua tion, remains convinced the Uni versity ignored his disability. “We claim we’re so advanced in mental illness and the treatment,” he said. “But the actions of the peo ple in this institution don’t reflect that. They’re in the Stone Age.” Finding further accommodation Molly Sirois, an assistant coun selor with Disability Services, said there are several methods to accom modate students with disabilities, especially during testing. She said the most common re course for students with learning disabilities is to place them in a separate classroom where they can have more time and fewer distrac tions to complete their tests. Sirois said there are a variety of measures for students with physi cal disabilities. Blind students can have class work translated into Braille or tests can be scanned into a computer and administered through a synthetic speech pro gram. For those with who have prob lems with their motor functions, Sirois said they can answer test questions verbally and have some one write or type out their answers. Bonnie Bennett, a student with a slight disability that affects her abil ity to write, said she does not feel she’s at a disadvantage in her class es. “The test I take at the Disability Office is the same test my class mates have,” she said. “I use a type writer to answer essay questions rather than having to write them out.” While she said it would be nice just to answer questions verbally, Bennett also said she had no prob lems expressing herself through the arrangements with the Disability Office. Yet, Sirois said, for students with severe learning disabilities, classes become far more difficult. “It’s more about maybe accessing and retrieving the information learned and actually expressing that,” she said. For these students and others with severe physical impairments, Sirois said there need to be testing methods that are “not there yet in education philosophy.” “I’d like to see the way that we really ask students to express their knowledge change,” she said. “I think we need to look to new ways to ask students what they’ve learned; it’s time we looked at that in higher education as a whole.” Education for the educators Most professors said they simply follow the recommendations of Disability Services to accommodate students with disabilities. Religious studies professor and department head Andrew Goble said he is informed by Disability Services when a student with spe cial needs will be attending his class and what that student will re quire. He said he appreciates the help from Disability Services, because with 200 to 300 students in some classes, it would be hard to find students who need some extra help. “We’re informed of it, because it’s not up to us to look over the class and see who’s deserving,” he said. But Gould said that teachers and department heads need to be more aware about how to deal with stu dents with disabilities one-on-one. She said when the situation with Minchella arose, it was only through extensive help from Dis ability Services that she began to re alize the process for working with a dissatisfied student with disabili ties. “I had to find that out all the hard way,” she said. Gould said it wasn’t because she and her staff couldn’t accommo date people; she said she just thought educators should be better prepared to deal with any situation. She said this likely could be facili tated through an orientation period, where staff members from Disabili ty Services could explain the vari ous types of disabilities and how best to accommodate them. “Traditional educators need to be informed,” she said. Senate passes annual sessions bill By Brad Cain The Associated Press SALEM — A proposed ballot measure asking voters if they want the Oregon Legislature to meet in annual sessions, rather than every other year, won easy approval Mon day in the Senate. The measure cleared the Senate on a 24-4 vote after supporters said annual sessions would allow legis lators to keep closer tabs on state agencies and make it easier to draw up a state budget. Opponents of SJR12 said, howev er, that annual sessions eventually would lead to a full-time Legisla ture of professional politicians. If the measure clears the House, it will be placed before voters in May 2002. The measure would au thorize the Legislature to meet each January and limit to 150 the total number of days lawmakers could meet in a two-year period. Oregon is one of only seven states where lawmakers don’t meet each year, and supporters of the move to annual sessions said the current every-other-year arrange ment isn’t efficient in an age where state government has grown to a $12 billion operation. Republican Sen. Randy Miller, sponsor of the measure, said law makers meeting annually would be able to make sure state agencies were carrying out the mandates im posed on them by the Legislature. Miller and other backers of annu al sessions also argue that the cur rent every-other-year approach doesn’t work well with term limits, where lawmakers are prohibited from serving more than six years in the House or eight in the Senate. The measure was opposed by Sen. Lenn Hannon, one of the Sen ate’s longest-serving members, who called it a “fraud” and said law makers were trying to get around the term limits law by having the Legislature meet each year. “If term limits is the issue, then let’s vote on it,” the Ashland Re publican said. Further, Hannon said he doubts Oregonians want “full-time politi cians. “We need a citizen legislature, not a full-time, year-round legisla ture,” Hannon said. Virtual once Systems Inc. In Partnership with The University of Oregon Bookstore 3131 West 11th Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 10-6 AMDK7 Athlon 800Thundorhird $1099.99 • Microstar MS 6330 Board • 32 MB GeForce 2 MX • 20 GB 7200 RPM Drive •128 MB 100 MHz SDRAM • 17" .27 SVGA Monitor With Athlon 900, $1149.99 With Athlon 1000, $1189.99 With a 19” Monitor $1229.99 VOS, AMD, and UO Bookstore Supporting Women’s Basketball. 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