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Ability Awareness Week

Ability Awareness Week - Voorhees Township Public … Week . Rainbow of Abilities – Differences Weaknesses Strengths . Which end of your rainbow would you want someone to focus

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Ability

Awareness

Week

Rainbow of Abilities – Differences

Strengths Weaknesses

Which end of your rainbow would you want someone to focus

upon?

Strengths Weaknesses

Some differences in ability are easy to see…

…while others are not!

Can you tell which adult was the first to walk, talk, or read?

Similarities

Everyone needs:

• Respect

• Inclusion

• Friends

When encountering someone with different abilities…

• DON’T feel afraid or nervous.

• DON’T assume that they are not smart.

• DON’T assume that they need help. Ask first (“Would you like some help?”).

• Don’t stare, use hurtful words, or passively participate in teasing/bullying.

• DO smile and say, “HELLO!”

• DO focus on their strengths.

• DO include them during lunch, recess, games, and parties.

• DO be patient.

Keep the rainbow bright for yourself and empower others to do the same!

Albert Einstein

• Mathematician/Physicist who had a learning disability and did not speak until age 3. He is rumored to have had a very difficult time doing math in school and reportedly had had a very difficult time expressing himself through writing.

Henry Ford • Dyslexic

• Invented the motor car

Leonardo Da Vinci

• Dyslexic • Responsible for some of the

greatest religious paintings in history, Da Vinci excelled not only in painting, but in numerous other disciplines as well. He was a architect, botanist, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, painter, sculptor, and writer. His paintings include the "Mona Lisa" and "the Last Supper of Jesus Christ."

Stephen Hawking • Motor Neuron Disease

• Communicated using a computer, uses wheelchair to get around independently

• This famous astronomical physicist has written many books, including "A Brief History of Time" and "Black Holes and Baby Universes."

Temple Grandin

• Temple Grandin, Ph.D., is the most

accomplished and well-known adult with autism in the world. Dr. Grandin didn't talk until she was three and a half years old, communicating her frustration instead by screaming, peeping, and humming. Even though she was considered "weird" in her young school years, she eventually found a mentor, who recognized her interests and abilities. Dr. Grandin later developed her talents into a successful career as a livestock-handling equipment designer, one of very few in the world. Dr. Grandin presently works as a Professor of Animal Science at Colorado State University. She also speaks around the world on both autism and cattle handling. . She has written many best selling books.

Tanni Grey-Thompson

• This athlete is instantly recognized by most people.

• Formerly Tanni Grey - the Thompson was added following her marriage in 1999 – she has competed in Paralympic Games since 1988, representing Britain at distances ranging from 100 meters to 800 meters.

• She has won fourteen paralympic medals including nine golds, and has broken over twenty world records. As a wheelchair athlete she was also the winner of five London marathons – in 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2001. In recent years, she has established herself as a TV presenter.

Marla Runyan

• Vision loss due to Stargardt Disease.

• This athlete represented the Unites States in the 1500 meter track event at the 2000 Olympics. She finished in eighth position, 3.20 seconds behind the gold medal winner. In 1996, Marla set several track and field records at the Paralympics in Atlanta, Georgia.

• Following that success, Marla competed in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, where she became the first legally blind athlete to compete in an Olympics.

Michael Bolton

• Singer

• Famous for ballads from the 1980’s

• Deaf in one ear

Paul Stanley

Born with a defect of the outer ear, deaf in right ear Lead singer of KISS

Itzhak Perlman

• Contracted polio at age 4, both legs paralyzed as a result.

• Famous violinist. He walks with crutches and performs seated. Perlman actively promotes building and transportation accessibility laws. This Israeli violinist is well-known for the technical mastery he has of the violin.

Nick Jonas

• Nick Jonas of the Jonas Brothers, has type 1 diabetes, a disease that results when the body does not produce the hormone insulin that is needed to convert sugar into energy.

• He must take insulin daily.

James Earl Jones

• Difference: Stuttering

• Played the voice of Darth Vader in the movie "Star Wars"; played role as Shakespeare's Othello; appeared in the movie "Conan the Barbarian"; and portrayed a stutterer in the movie "A Family Thing."

• In his autobiography "Voice and Silences", Jones wrote that he was "virtually mute" as a child.

Christopher Reeve

• Never has a person with an ability challenge commanded so much media attention in recent history. Christopher Reeve, unable to walk after a horse-riding injury, dedicated the rest of his life to help others stand confident. He strove to harness the power of medical research to get up & ride again.

Michael J. Fox

• Neurological Disorder – Parkinson’s

• Actor

• Starred in Back to the Future movies, television

• Founded Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research

Thank you for caring!