Peering at the post

We are one of the one point something million households who have received New Zealand Post’s daunting six page survey asking a lot of impertinent questions about who we are and what we earn, like to do, eat, buy, drive etc. They snuck it past the ‘no circulars’ sign on our letter box by cunningly disguising it as a regular letter.

Needless to say we’ll be choosing not to fill it in. The reason is not so much their open admission that they want us to allow them to pass on all our personal information to a whole bunch of unknown marketers who will then bombard us with Internet spam and the postal equivalent, probably despite our ‘no circulars sign’ and the anti spam law. No it’s not so much the effrontery of the exercise; it is simply the utterly awful appearance of it.

As a partially sighted person it might be assumed that I wouldn’t fill it in anyway. But one would have to be highly motivated as well as having 2020 vision and a very good light to be enticed by a few tawdry prizes and the one in one point something million ‘chance to win.’ The usual interminable and no doubt, (since I can’t read them) tedious terms and conditions alone are minuscule, about 4 point text. The six pages of invasion of privacy have extremely poor contrast, pale grey text on pale blue and tiny form fields and text. Why would anyone bother?

Anyone who is really keen could fill it in online, the online survey is better in appearance but without testing it I couldn’t vouch for its accessibility.

Poor old New Zealand Post, already shedding jobs because of the demise of snail mail is desperately clutching at straws and buying into a recessionary dream world where everyone is young with perfect vision and a trusting faith in ‘a chance to win.’ They have never heard of the ageing population and that most ‘normally’ sighted people over 40 need their reading specs for more readable material than the survey.

So NZ Post we won’t be filling in your survey because we, like many others I suspect, simply can’t read it, and have more interesting things to do online. But I will add the form to my collection of abject examples of terrible communication I use in workshops.

On a brighter note I read in the Dompost that ‘plain English’ sale and purchase forms for home buyers and sellers will be available soon. The Real Estate Institute is trying to get rid of complexity and ambiguity. I hope they really are plain English and really work.

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Filed under Information Accessibility, Web Accessibility

Human rights and disability newsletter

The Human rights commission has just released its latest disability and human rights newsletter, Manahau: Resilience and Celebration.

This edition contains the announcement that the site has NZ Sign content. A cause for celebration!

There is also a review of Nobody’s Perfect, a sadly rather inaccessible film from the Human Rights Film Festival, a profile on New Zealand disability leader and world president of Rehabilitation International Anne Hawker, Talking about Work, more Deaf stories and a n accessible transport survey How bumpy is your Journey. Hopefully lots of people will respond to that.

The newsletter is interactive so you can post feedback to any newsletter item online.

You can subscribe and visit archives.

I would be interested to hear any feedback about the accessibility of Manahau.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility

Inclusive education means everyone

Learning Better Together is a long overdue report. Subtitled working towards inclusive education in NZ schools the report is a breath of fresh air in the so called ‘special’ education debate.

Making a strong case for including all children in our schools the report says “Inclusive education stands in contrast to ‘special’ education, where disabled children are educated in separate schools or classes, or treated very differently in the classroom to regular students.”

The report presents evidential research to show that disabled children will do better on many counts if they are included. This is not ‘mainstreaming’ or even ‘maindumping’ as I have heard it called, but it takes the next step.

Some people think that the increasing numbers of disabled students attending mainstream schools after the 1989 Education Act were the first disabled children in their local schools, but of course this isn’t true. Some of us were there more years ago than we care to think about, and we survived. We may not have been included in today’s sense, but I still think we are better off.

Of course some of us are barely literate or numerate but nonethe- less I would have hated to be sent away at five years old as were many of my contemporaries. I was sent away at thirteen, but that’s another story and another kind of institution!

When I worked in EEO a fair number of years ago I checked out all the disabled people I knew in Wellington who worked in the new improved public service. To a man and a woman they had all had the most significant part of their education in mainstream schools. I know it was a totally unscientific survey, but it supports the argument for good quality inclusive education.

I first came across Jude McArthur, who wrote the report, a few years ago when she presented her research with disabled children at an IHC education forum, I was so impressed that I asked her to speak to our Commission meeting. The voices of disabled children talking about their experience at school are telling. They show just how much work there is to do.

But of course true inclusive education is not just a slightly improved ‘special’ education. It is a whole new way of educating our children together in a learning environment which respects and values them all, and which enables them all to achieve.

If you have trouble with the link or want a hard copy or a copy of the accompanying DVD you can write to:

IHC Advocacy
PO box 4155
Wellington 6140

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights

Hot Sandwich on a cold night

Last Friday night we went to Old St Paul’s to listen to Hot Club Sandwich on the recommendation of a friend. Malcolm McNeil was a guest and he is always good. I had thought Hot Club Sandwich would be quite jazzy because of Malcolm McNeil and they are. But I was pleasurably surprised though as I am not a fan of some kinds of really serious Jazz. They are a lot of fun and we intend to go again on July 3rd. As well as being great professional entertainers they have an appealing humorous touch. St Paul’s is a lovely venue and the concert was informal and friendly. Just the thing for a Friday night.

Bass player Terry Crayford is better known to many of us than we might think since he wrote the theme for Fair Go.

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Filed under The Arts