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About The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 2019)
ARTS & CU LTU RE J Obstacles to overcome STUDENTS RECEIVE TOOLS FRON THE DISABILITY RESOURCE CENTER BY ALLIE PERKINS STAFF WRITER People with disabilities can have trouble living their lives on a day-to-d ay basis. This can be especially true when they’re a college student. Luckily, Clackamas Community College can help people w ho have disabilities. C C C ’ s Disability Resource Center offers a variety o f support for those who have disabilities, both visible and invisible alike. Christina Bruck, a coordinator at the Disability Resource Center, explained the hardships of students who have a disorder. “ Even a learning disability significantly im pacts a student. I heard a beautiful example in the autism presentation the other day, that you ask somebody with a processing disorder a question and they go to the file cabinet to try and pull out those details. They are sitting at this wall o f file cabinets and are trying to pull out details to put together. If you don’t patiently wait to ask that question again, and you ask it, they will close those file cabinets and will have to start all over,” Bruck said. Students’ disorders can notably impact their schooling in multiple ways, especially if a teacher is unaware o f a student’ s disability. “ It’s a process to pull off different pieces to be able to put it all together,” Bruck explained. Students with disabilities can be affected significantly in their school because with each obstacle in their path, they have to learn in their own way to overcome it. M idterm s and finals are hard on any college student, but sometimes people with disabilities have it worse. “ Having classes, depending on how many credits they’re taking, that means that they have multiple things that they have to process, especially if it comes to midterms and finals,” Bruck said. “ Some students may try to study and cram and you know how hard it is to take all those different finals when you have three to five classes that you’re studying for. Somebody who m ight have a processing disorder then is categorizing and are trying to keep all that information ih place with all these tests that are happening, and they are already struggling w ith getting that information and retaining it.” Bruck went on to explain that students with processing disorders need extra time to organize their thoughts so they can Makayla Blackburn is a student support staff member at the front desk of the Disability Resource Center. prepare themselves for the educational hardships that school may bring. The Associated Student Governm ent and Multicultural Center are planning on broadening their resources for students w ith disabilities as w ell as creating a welcom ing environm ent for the w hole community. The ASG and Multicultural Center plan on participating in events for people with disabilities in the future. Felicia A rce, assistive techn ology specialist at the Disability Resource Center, explaind how hard it is for students who have disabilities in school. “ Say that someone doesn’t show up to a m eeting,” Arce said. “ Maybe advisers are like, ‘Oh they just forgot.’ They didn’t value it. Where on the student’s side, they’re like, ‘No. ’ They had a lot of anxiety or something came up, or you know, maybe they didn’t get transportation there. There’s a lot more. They are not trying to be rude, it was just something that was out of their control happened. I think that’s that mindset that we often forget.” Undergraduates 2011-12 w o -» Students without Disabilities Source: U .l department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2016). Digest of Education Statistics, 2015 (2016-014), Chapter 3. Clackamas Print % of Students with Disabilities theclackam asprint.com Graphic by Daniel Bremer February 13,2019