Teaching Students with Physical Disabilities
SKU: 62198538233

Teaching Students with Physical Disabilities

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Description

Teaching Students with Physical DisabilitiesCOURSE OVERVIEW: Welcome to the Teaching Students with Physical Disabilities course. This program has been designed to equip you with the specialised knowledge, instructional practices and adaptive teaching strategies required to support students who present with a wide range of physical disabilities across school settings. You will explore the characteristics of major physical disabilities, understand how these conditions influence learning and

COURSE OVERVIEW:

Welcome to the Teaching Students with Physical Disabilities course. This program has been designed to equip you with the specialised knowledge, instructional practices and adaptive teaching strategies required to support students who present with a wide range of physical disabilities across school settings. You will explore the characteristics of major physical disabilities, understand how these conditions influence learning and participation, and apply targeted accommodations that promote access, independence and educational success.

This course begins by examining the major forms of physical disabilities and their impact on learning, mobility and classroom participation. This section explains conditions such as cerebral palsy, epilepsy, spina bifida, hydrocephalus, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis and traumatic brain injury, outlining how each disability affects movement, coordination, communication, stamina, cognition and everyday functioning. This section also explores other disabling conditions that commonly intersect with physical impairments.

The next learning area explores how to accommodate and teach students with specific physical disabilities. This section describes teaching strategies for students with cerebral palsy, epilepsy, spina bifida, hydrocephalus, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis and traumatic brain injury. This section explains how to modify classroom activities, adjust expectations, implement assistive equipment, manage fatigue, ensure safety, incorporate therapeutic recommendations and support inclusive participation. It also outlines the duties of teachers working with students who have traumatic brain injury, including communication with families, monitoring recovery and coordinating multidisciplinary support.

The next learning area focuses on students with impaired hearing and the characteristics teachers must recognise. This section explains the principal characteristics of hearing loss, the different types of hearing impairment and the ways hearing loss affects language development, communication and academic progress. This section also outlines effective communication methods, including lip-reading, sign languages, visual supports and amplification systems.

The next learning area examines teaching strategies for hearing-impaired students and the classroom arrangements that best support them. This section provides strategies for enhancing communication clarity, positioning students effectively, reducing background noise and using visual cues. This section also outlines classroom management principles that ensure engagement and equitable access to spoken information, group discussions and teacher instructions.

The next learning area focuses on students with impaired vision and the educational implications of visual loss. This section explains how children’s visual functioning is assessed, the impact of visual impairment on development, the types of vision loss and the common diseases that cause reduced vision or blindness. This section also identifies the priority needs of vision-impaired students, including tactile access, orientation and mobility skills, and environmental consistency.

The next learning area presents strategies for teaching students with impaired vision. This section explains how to adapt classroom environments, simplify layouts, modify materials, enlarge print, incorporate tactile resources and use assistive technologies. This section also explores the early development of blind children, the importance of explicit concept teaching and the role of mobility training in developing independence and safety.

The next learning area examines how to support deaf–blind students and the instructional adaptations needed for dual sensory impairment. This section outlines approaches for communication, environmental modification, one-on-one instructional support and tactile learning. This section also explores curriculum planning for deaf–blind students, highlighting how educational programs must be highly individualised, experience-based and aligned with functional learning goals.

By the end of this course you will be able to recognise the major physical disabilities affecting students, interpret their educational implications, design safe and accessible learning environments, apply disability-specific teaching strategies, communicate effectively with students who have hearing or vision loss, plan curriculum adaptations for deaf–blind learners and support inclusive participation that promotes independence, confidence and academic progress.

LEARNING OUTCOMES:

By the end of this course, you will be able to understand:

  • The major forms of physical disabilities
  • Cerebral palsy and how to accommodate and teach students with cerebral palsy?
  • The treatments and approaches for cerebral palsy
  • Epilepsy and how to accommodate and teach students with epilepsy?
  • Spina bifida and how to accommodate and teach students with spina bifida?
  • Hydrocephalus and how to accommodate and teach students with hydrocephalus?
  • Muscular dystrophy and how to accommodate and teach students with muscular dystrophy?
  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) and how to accommodate and teach students with MS?
  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and how to accommodate and teach students with TBI?
  • The duties for a teacher of a student with TBI
  • Other disabling conditions
  • Students with impaired hearing
  • The principal characteristics of individuals with hearing loss
  • The types of hearing loss
  • Methods of communication with students with impaired hearing
  • How to teach hearing-impaired students?
  • Strategies to use when working with hearing-impaired students
  • The principles of classroom management and arrangements for hearing-impaired students
  • Students with impaired vision
  • The assessment of children’s visual functioning
  • The impact of impaired vision on individuals
  • The early development of blind children
  • The types of vision impairment
  • The most frequent diseases or disorders of the eye resulting in impaired vision
  • The priority needs of students with impaired vision
  • The mobility skills that should be taught to vision-impaired students
  • How to teach students with impaired vision?
  • The simple adaptations that teachers can make for students with impaired vision
  • The deaf–blind student
  • How to accommodate and teach deaf-blind students?
  • Curriculum planning for deaf–blind students

COURSE DURATION:

The typical duration of this course is approximately 2-3 hours to complete. Your enrolment is Valid for 12 Months. Start anytime and study at your own pace.

ASSESSMENT:

A simple 10-question true or false quiz with Unlimited Submission Attempts.

CERTIFICATION:

Upon course completion, you will receive a customised digital “Certificate of Completion”.

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SKU: 62198538233

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GymBum
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Great little speakers
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These make great surround speakers, and they just sound good
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Good Speakers - Good Reputation - Good Purchase
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Good sounding, high quality speakers. These are Klipsch...enough said.
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Hatem
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Klipsch R50 M next generation
Size: 5.25” Woofer
In spite of small size sound is very nice iam using it with a subwoofer and with my yamaha A4A AV receiver i like it iam hearing mostly heavy metal and the speakers have a nice punch and attack
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Yaniv.F
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 4
compact surrounds that blend well with the right setup
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I picked up the Klipsch R‑40M as part of a full 5.1 system built around the R‑50M fronts and the R‑50C center. My original plan was to use another pair of R‑50M speakers in the back, but they simply didn’t fit in the rear cabinet space I have. The R‑40M ended up being the only model that fit comfortably, so they became my surround channels. In terms of build quality, they feel solid and consistent with the rest of the Reference Next‑Gen line. The copper woofers and updated horn design give them the same visual identity as the larger models, which helps the whole system look cohesive. They’re compact enough to place in tighter spaces without compromising too much on performance. Sonically, the R‑40M does a respectable job as a surround speaker. Effects are clear, directional cues are easy to follow, and they integrate smoothly with the more powerful R‑50M fronts. That said, they are noticeably less powerful than the R‑50M, so you need to spend a little time balancing your levels. Once I bumped their channel trim a bit and adjusted the distance settings, the rear soundstage locked in nicely and felt much more even. They won’t deliver the same fullness or dynamic punch as the larger models, but for rear channels that’s usually not a deal breaker. What matters is clarity and consistency, and the R‑40M handles both well. Movies with active surround mixes feel immersive, and ambient effects wrap around the room without calling attention to the speakers themselves. If you’re building a system where space is limited in the back, the R‑40M is a practical and capable choice. Just be prepared to fine tune your calibration so they match the output of the bigger speakers up front. Once dialed in, they round out a 5.1 setup very effectively.
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Integrion
Dallas, US
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Great Bang for the Buck!
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These R50 Studio Monitors are worth every penny. One could easily spend a heck of a lot more to get less. Have been a pro audio engineer my entire life. These monitors kick out clean, solid bass and accurate highs. Klipsch did a excellent job designing these monitors. Perfect for smail spaces where fidelity is critical. If you wall mount these, make sure you leave at least a 1.5 inch air gap between the back of the monitor and the wall. These units are sweet.
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