Open University Degree for the Blind
From the collection of
Launched in 2000, Northern Ireland Screen’s Digital Film Archive spans from 1897 to the present day and currently contains an ever-expanding catalogue of 13,000 items. It comprises material from a variety of depositors including feature films, sport, documentaries, animation, amateur footage, light entertainment, and a significant proportion of broadcast material from the UTV Archive.
Open University Degree for the Blind
(Good Evening Ulster)
New technologies open the doors to higher education.
Gerry Kelly reports for Good Evening Ulster on provisions being made by the Open University for a registered blind man to take a degree. He tells Gerry how he can see only well enough to find his way around and to read a newspaper headline, but nothing smaller, and describes how he only has a little power in his left arm.
He describes how education was always a struggle for him due to his impaired vision. Having initially been taught in a school for the blind he found it hard when he attended grammar school in Bangor, and had similar problems at night school. However, the ability to listen to his course books on audio tape through the university has been transformative for him. With the cassettes, a braille machine to make notes on, and an understanding employer who allows him to use these devices in the office, new possibilities of education have suddenly opened up for him.
Good Evening Ulster was the weekday tea-time local news round-up for Ulster Television throughout much of the 1980s and helped to launch the careers of household names such as Gloria Hunniford and Eamonn Holmes.
From the collection
Diversity and Inclusion
A selection of news clips from the UTV archives highlighting the struggle for equality and diversity in Northern Ireland.
The 1980s and 1990s saw several significant changes in Northern Irish society. From improving services and support for neurodiverse people and people with physical disabilities, to amending workplace laws to address inequality for women, UTV documented many small but significant steps towards progress.
The channel also covered Northern Ireland's growing diversity in terms of population. People from all over the world moved to the country to live and work. In this collection, we learn more about the Chinese, Indian, Persian and other communities that now call Northern Ireland home.
55 videos in this collection
2
Benefits Protest - Women Take Action
3
Year of the Snake - A Chinese New Year Celebration
4
Calling Indian Entrepreneurs
5
Indian Business Forum Celebrates Three Years of Success
6
The Fine Art of Indian Cookery
7
Working from Home... 80s Style
10
Hearing Dogs for the Deaf
11
Sympathetic Hearing Scheme
12
Institute for the Deaf Renovated
13
Anne Hailes Visits the Share Centre
16
A Drive for More Inclusive Language
21
An Artist's Group for Women
23
Jo Richardson discusses Equal Pay
24
Women's Coalition Party Election Broadcast, 2003
25
Woman's Coalition Party Election Broadcast, 1998
27
PA Macglochlainn Campaigns for Gay Rights
29
Campaign for Free Pensioner Transport
30
Fishing for the Disabled with Jack Charlton
32
Open University Degree for the Blind
33
Sailing Boat for the Disabled
34
Ardkeen Hostel for the Disabled
35
NI Railways - First Female Conductor
36
Equality in the 1990s Workplace
38
Equal Opportunities Commission Reports on Sexual Discrimination
40
Making the Workplace Equal for Blind People
41
Raising Deaf Awareness in the Workplace
42
Bringing Women Together Online
43
Celebrating the Persian New Year
44
Raising Awareness in the 1990s
45
Bowling for Wheelchair Users
46
Better Representation for All
47
Charlotte Receives a Cochlear Implant
50
Making the Ulster Museum More Accessible
53
Belfast's Bahá?í Community Celebrates Peace
54
Democrashe: Getting Women into Politics
55
Northern Ireland's First Professional Woman Golfer
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