duration

Duration

duration

Location
In-house

duration

Availability
Good


Suitable for:       All What does this mean?


Both blindness and partial sight can vary in degree and cause, and they may have a significant impact on your colleagues or customers ability to access information and perform various activities independently.

Open your eyes to the diverse experiences of residents with visual impairments and gain invaluable insights into their world.

Our expert trainer will guide you through practical tools and adaptive techniques, empowering you to create accessible environments and enhance communication. Learn to navigate the challenges of low vision, and gain confidence in supporting visually impaired colleagues and customers.

Make a real impact on lives, bring your inclusion agenda to life and be a catalyst for positive change.

  • Read more

    The aim of the training is to support you to:

    • Be confident, inclusive and professional when meeting the needs of customers and/or colleagues who are blind or partially sighted
    • Understand your legal and organisational responsibilities towards people with blindness or partial sight.

    What will you learn?

    Knowledge:

    • Statistics, terminology and definitions
    • Lived experience of blindness and partial sight Legal and organisational responsibilities Medical and Social Models of Disability

    Skills:

    • Identifying barriers on both sides Guiding – what to do and possible pit falls Describing the physical environment Building an inclusive digital experience

    Who should attend?

    • Front line teams
    • Managers responsible for policy and processes involving disabled people
    • Communications Teams
  • Our trainer

    Julie Ryder

    In December 1991, I was an ACIB certified banker with nothing in the way of me and a successful career. The month is significant as it marked the start of a journey from normal hearing to profound deafness. Life would never be the same again.

    The hearing aids were my first issue – ugly, uncomfortable and noticeable. Once my hearing deteriorated to a moderate loss, I began to miss out on conversation, responding incorrectly to other people and 2nd guessing what had been said. Enjoyment from music and socialising started to ebb away. Severe deafness brought a whole new set of problems, particularly at work, resulting in a significantly downgraded job role. My self confidence was dive bombing as quickly as my hearing. The final straw came once I was unable to hear even my own voice. Profound deafness had cut me off from others and I’d lost myself too.

    With deafness now a permanent feature of my life, I had 2 options: give up or carry on. I started learning British Sign Language and then decided to learn to lip read too. With encouragement from Matt, my husband, I trained as a volunteer deaf awareness tutor with the UK charity ‘Hearing Concern’. This experience formed the precursor to the work we do today. The biggest breakthrough came in 2002 when I received a Cochlear Implant (CI) on my left side. For the first time in 11 years, I had stability. It was time to start living.

    I felt energised and wanted to use my experiences positively. It was clear that employers and service providers needed more skills, knowledge and confidence to include deaf people (and other marginalised people too). Since 2002 I’ve been prolific in researching, developing and delivering training and whether the driver for the training is law or business, it’s important to me that people are at the heart of it.

We can bring this course to you.
If you have five or more staff interested our in-house training offers great value for money.

Complete the form below and we’ll be in touch.