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Surrey Schools continues accessibility series by understanding, addressing and removing barriers

Leah Ison

The latest video in the district's four-part series on accessibility is available now, putting a focus on the term barriers and how people with disabilities may face obstacles that can make everyday tasks difficult or impossible - and what we can do to help.


Created by the Surrey Schools accessibility working group and advisory committee, the four videos are intended to create a common understanding of the terms disability, barriers, accessibility and inclusion in school communities across Surrey and White Rock. The second video explores barriers and how a disability - when combined with a barrier - can prevent a person from fully and equally participating in the world around them.


"We wanted to create a video that would be inclusive of barriers that students, staff members or members of the community may face in their everyday lives," said Colin Reid, District Principal with Student Support. "We tried to ensure the video would be applicable to barriers found in many different environments."

As part of the Surrey Schools accessibility plan, the district is actively working to reduce barriers for persons with disabilities throughout schools and other district facilities, including by gathering survey feedback to identify barriers to accessibility. The feedback to date informed the direction of our second video, which highlights three types of barriers:

  • physical barriers: stairs without a ramp, unreachable light switches, heavy doors, uneven paths or sidewalks, lack of assistive technologies (i.e. closed captioning, screen readers);

  • sensory barriers: absence of braille or sign language interpretation, excessively bright rooms or noisy environments;

  • attitudinal barriers: social stigma around disabilities, assumptions of one's capabilities or needs for support based on visible or less visible disabilities.




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