Reflections Magazine Issue #77 - Fall 2012 | Page 10

Campus Feature Overcoming the SHU Disabled Students Don’t Let Physical Obstacles Get in the Way of Success By Austin Harper ’13—Student Writer 10 Reflections Fall ’12 T here are currently anywhere from 25–75 disabled students at Siena Heights University. Learning and mobile disabilities, visual, hearing and cognitive impairments and autism, all of these and more are challenges among some of SHU’s most promising students. There may be the assumption that trials such as these greatly hinder these students; that they struggle day in and day out, barely passing classes. There may even be the perception that they may never even be able enter into the workforce. Odds . . . According to Bob Ritz (left, middle), SHU’s learning specialist/ADA coordinator, this could not be further from reality. He said these students are given every opportunity to succeed. First, they must have documentation of their disability and they must ask for the help. As long as they do this, he and SHU will provide any assistance the students require. “Enlarged textbooks, taped lectures, extended test times, I provide all of these accommodations,” Ritz said. “A student with ADD may be distracted by a pencil being tapped on a desk or a page being turned. They can take their test in my office, free of distractions, to level the playing field.” Though these students are given assistance, he said they do not have it easy. Leaving counselors and constant parent support during high school, college is an extremely different experience. “They have to do a lot on their own,” Ritz said. Students with documented disabilities usually meet with Ritz for only their first year, but he has had some students who have been in contact with him all four years until graduation. “These students graduate because of their hard work and perseverance,” Ritz said. “They are not afraid to get help and they make it. I find them outstanding.” Blind Ambition A prime example of one of these outstanding students is Tiffany Swoish. Swoish, a junior criminal justice major, has ocular albinism, an inherited condition in which the eyes lack melanin pigment, resulting in low vision. Her vision is 20/80, and she is considered legally blind. “I was born with it, so I didn’t really have to get used to anything,” she said. “I take notes by listening instead of reading the board. I also have enlarged textbooks.”