The role of computers in promoting independence for adults with learning disabilities: a forgotten history?
In the late 1980's and early 1990's I worked in
two mental handicap hospitals in Staffordshire and two Adult Training Centres
in Shropshire.
Bagnall Hospital where I used to work |
My job was to use computers to help people with
learning disabilities gain social and life skills such as shopping and
travelling safely.
BBC Microcomputer with Touch Screen |
It was also a time when many people thought that computers could be really powerful tools
to help people with learning disabilities improve their independence.
Now thirty years later when life-story work is growing and many people
with learning disabilities are talking and writing about their experiences of
living in institutions, I have noticed that there are few, if any, stories
about computers.
I think this is very strange and we need to ask
some important questions about this:
Have we forgotten about the
role that computers played in the lives of adults with learning disabilities in
the 1980's and 1990's?
Were computers as helpful in
the past as researchers thought they would be or did they have very little
influence on the lives of people with learning disabilities.
What can we learn from the
history of computer use and experiences that can help us understand and develop
good practices in supporting people to use technologies today?
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