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Unread 23-09-2007, 16:16
Covey41 Covey41 is offline
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Re: Disabled drivers

Over the years FIRST has made many adjustments for people who have one challenge or another. In NJ one year a deaf student was allowed to have sign language specialist as a 4th drive team member. The very first year BAE sponsored the Granite State event there was a driver that was under 3' tall, (age 16) they were allowed a step stool. At the championship event in 2001 on Newton there was a blind student on a drive team. ( I don't remember what he/she did on the drive team.)

Remember we now have an FRC team made up of entirely deaf students.

Over the years FIRST has done everything they could to help out students with challenges. A part of every field is a wheel chair ramp that raises the chair at least a foot off the floor.

While it is necessary to help people who are truly challenged, I would hate to see exceptions made for perceived handicaps. Unfortunately as Dean says "Life is not fair".

I also have to ask: Is it FIRST, or the teams that limit challenged students activities? It appears to me FIRST has done everything it could to encourage / inspire all students.
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Unread 24-09-2007, 09:05
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Re: Disabled drivers

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Originally Posted by Covey41 View Post
Over the years FIRST has done everything they could to help out students with challenges. A part of every field is a wheel chair ramp that raises the chair at least a foot off the floor.
I'm not sure it was a whole foot of height, but this ramp was used at GLR and Detroit. A heavy beast - we got one of the bigger field-reset guys to move it about when it was needed. If it wasn't needed for a driver in a wheelchair, it was made available to a team with a short person driver. (Sorry if that's not the correct term.) Otherwise that team had a box he could stand on.

The rule interpretation was made so that the person in the wheelchair could be up on the ramp during autonomous, even though he would be in front of the foot-fault line.
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Unread 24-09-2007, 22:14
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Re: Disabled drivers

Because our team is half made up of students from the American School for the Deaf, we have quite a few disability issues.

As far as drivers and driver stations go, last year, we had a deaf human player. Our primary driver could sign, so would interpret drive meetings for José (our deaf human player), and he would understand what to do during the game, and what the primary strategy is, etc.

This worked out fine. We had no problems as far as miscommunication between our human player and what his job was on the field for that particular match.

So I guess in this case, we worked around the problem and found a solution without providing additional equipment, because this is what would have had to have been done in the real world.

On the flip side though, I don't see why providing a stool for a short person would be such a big deal. This is a real-world aid that is easily accessible, and doesn't require any expensive or complicated device. It's a stool.

My 2 cents.

Jacob
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