A place to thrive

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High schooler Mohammed Al-Jawadi is skilled at finding solutions. At  finding opportunities. Screen readers ZoomText and Jaws help the  soon-to-be sophomore when he’s working on a computer. Taking a picture  with his phone lets Al-Jawadi zoom in to see an image better.  Occasionally he uses a monocular to cross the street, or a magnifier to  view the price of an item at the store. When he recognizes that the  light in the sky is just right, he picks up his tennis racquet and heads  for a court.

Al-Jawadi also understands self-advocacy. When he started school at  Vancouver iTech Preparatory last fall, he led a training to help his  teachers understand his accessibility needs in the classroom and in the  community. He demonstrated the use of a Brailler and answered questions.  Later in the school year, Al-Jawadi took an early step toward his  future by interviewing four computer engineering experts, including one  from Amazon. He has already learned Java and hopes to become a software  engineer one day.

That self-determination, use of assistive technology, academic  progress and career goals led to Al-Jawadi earning the Washington State  School for the Blind’s Rodney B. Humble Outreach Award earlier this  month.

“I felt proud of myself that I achieved this,” he said. Ever-humble,  he added, “I was thankful to all the teachers that helped me in my  journey.”

Al-Jawadi credits teachers Tracy Spohn, Paul Haney, Danielle Baumann  among the many who have supported him. His school is a place where he  can thrive. Learn Python or JavaScript. Play soccer next year. He has  applied to be one of iTech’s peer mentors and help classmates resolve  conflicts–a good fit for the student whom teachers describe as polite  and respectful. Said Al-Jawadi, “iTech is a pretty fun and welcoming  place. It’s pretty awesome with the people that are here.”

Original source can be found here.



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