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03 December 2022 | Story Amanda Tongha | Photo Supplied
CUADS Dream Team
The dream team: The CUADS team, made up of staff on all three campuses, are, seated: Martie Miranda, Maduvha Malivhoho, Thokozile Thulo, and Mosa Moerane. Standing: Dimakatso Mpele, Charity Morrison, Thandiwe Pala, Zingisile Sesing, Antigonie Vorster, Mpho Mmusi, Motshelanoka Sising, Galekgolwe Motaung, and Grace Kene.

View interactive photo story.

 

International Day of Persons with Disabilities is observed annually on 3 December to promote an understanding of disability issues and to mobilise support for the dignity, rights, and well-being of persons with disabilities. The theme for 2022 is ‘Transformative solutions for inclusive development: the role of innovation in fuelling an accessible and equitable world’.

Removing barriers for persons with disabilities, the University of the Free State is committed to providing inclusive and accessible living, teaching, and learning spaces for all. 


1. Centre for Universal Access and Disability Support


Established in 2001, the Centre for Universal Access and Disability Support (CUADS) has offices on the Bloemfontein, South, and Qwaqwa campuses. Supplementary to the academic support offered to students with disabilities, CUADS plays a vital role in developing awareness and advocacy for persons with disabilities across all three campuses of the UFS. 

The centre provides support services to students with specific learning difficulties (e.g., dyslexia, ADD/ADHD, hyperactivity); mobility impairments (e.g., wheelchair users, amputees, cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, spina bifida, multiple sclerosis); visual impairments (e.g., blind, partially sighted, eye conditions); hearing impairments (deaf, hard of hearing, and deafened); debilitating mental health, psychological, and other chronic conditions (e.g., schizophrenia, epilepsy, panic disorder); and temporary impairments (e.g., a broken hand).


2. Support for hearing-impaired students


Supporting hearing impaired students

While the Centre for Universal Access and Disability Support coordinates academic support for students with disabilities, the UFS also has a well-established South African Sign Language interpreting service for deaf students.

Pictured is South African Sign Language user, Tinotenda Magaya, a final-year BSc Econometrics student, signing the universal sign, ‘I love you’. (Photo: Lunga Luthuli)

3. Support for visually impaired students 


Supporting  visually impaired students

With a large population of students with visual impairments, the UFS provides study material in different accessible formats, i.e., Braille.

Picture: Operating an electronic enlarger housed in all CUADS alternative assessment venues, is Antigonie Vorster, CUADS staff member responsible for the production of accessible study material, including enlarged, electronic, and Braille material. (Photo: :Lunga Luthuli)

4. Accessible and inclusive spaces 

The UFS supports the principles of universal design and access, creating learning, teaching, and living environments that are welcoming and empowering for ALL students. Ongoing developments at the university to address the challenges faced by persons with disabilities include tactile paving, ramps at the entrances of some buildings to make the premises accessible, signage inside and outside buildings, and dedicated seating in lecture rooms.

Accessible and inclusive spaces Picture: No barriers for mobility-impaired people like Victoria Sebatli, a B Social Work student.  (Photo: Rulanzen Martin)

Tactile paving across campuses makes it easy for Obakeng Seikaneng, a BA Communication Studies student, to navigate UFS spaces. (Photo: Rulanzen Martin) 

5. An inclusive university 

In support of its goal to be an inclusive institution, the UFS has approved a number of policies, including the Universal Access Disability Support policy for students with disabilities.

On 15 November 2022, CUADS had its Strategic Planning for 2023. Aligning itself with the UFS Vision 130 and its vision of aspiring to be a research-led, student-centred, and regionally engaged university that contributes to development and social justice through the production of globally competitive graduates and knowledge, CUADS' new vision is to co-create an inclusive environment where CUADS would be seamlessly and holistically integrated into every part of the UFS.

 

Read the UFS policy on Universal Access and Disability Support for students with disabilities 

An inclusive university

 

News Archive

dti announces nominees for 2008 Science and Technology Awards
2008-10-03

 

At the announcement of the nominees for the 2008 dti Technology Awards were, from the left: Prof. Schalk Louw, Department of Zoology and Entomology, Mr Sipho Zikode, Deputy Director General at the Department of Trade and Industry (dti), Dr Romilla Maharaj, Executive Director: Human and Institutional Capacity Development at the National Research Foundation (NRF), and Mr Ephraim Baloyi, Director: Innovation and Technology at the dti.

Mr Michael Chung, master’s student in Plant Pathology, explaining some of the research conducted in the Centre for Plant Health Management (Cephma).

Prof. Schalk Louw, Department of Zoology and Entomology, and Mr Ephraim Baloyi, Director: Innovation and Technology at the dti in the Cephma laboratory.

   
dti announces nominees for 2008 Science and Technology Awards

The Department of Trade and Industry’s (dti) Deputy Director-General, Mr Sipho Zikode, yesterday announced the nominees for the 2008 dti Technology Awards which will take place on 30 and 31 October in Bloemfontein.

The purpose of these annual awards is to recognise those researchers, private institutions and students who performed well in terms of innovation and technology development, says Mr Ephraim Baloyi, Director: Innovation and Technology at the dti.

The awards are a combination of the Annual Awards of the different dti programmes supporting technology in industry. They are the Technology and Human Resources for Industry Programme (THRIP), administered by the National Research Foundation (NRF), the Support Programme for Industrial Innovation (SPII), administered by the Industrial Development Corporation, and seda Technology Programme (stp), administered by the Small Enterprise Development Agency.

The dti delegation also visited the laboratory of Prof. Schalk Louw of the UFS to view the work of this former dti Technology Awards recipient. Prof. Louw is a member of the UFS Centre for Plant Health Management (Cephma) team that won a 2007 Technology Award for groundbreaking research work on kenaf (a South African commercial fibre crop used, amongst others, in the automotive industry). The research of the Cephma team is supported by the NRF’s THRIP programme.

The awards are hosted in a different province each year to increase awareness around the dti’s technology support for researchers, small enterprises, large industries and business incubators.

Media Release
Issued by: Leonie Bolleurs
Tel: 051 401 2707
Cell: 083 645 5853
3 October 2008

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