This class, though a class, is much more different than the traditional "classroom" setting that most of us are used to. I am going to be honest right now, I am in a class writing this blog. (multi-tasking!) My role as a student is to listen to the professor, what he has to say as well as what the other students have to say. We ask questions based on the material we have read or have heard lectured and expect to learn from those given things.
What makes this community-based class so unique is the fact that I play more than one role. I am a student yes, an observer, a listener. Each class period we learn from the 'head instructor' (i.e. Dawn!) but there is so much more than that. We go in to work with our clients and it is our duty to interact with these people and learn what types of interactions work for them particularly. They interact differently than you are I might interact with each other with words and complex phrases. To speak to them it is my responsibility to learn how my client is going to react to simple phrases and hand motions, more visual clues than words, and to learn what works best for my client.
But I am also an instructor, someone who is being observed. In this experience we are working with clients who need our help, friendship really. I go into each class period expecting to be able to act in such a way that the person that I am working with is going to have a reaction that is speaking against the 'disability' that they obtained. My client in particular struggles with left-side neglect (not noticing or paying attention to things in his left field of vision) so my goal is to get the client to react to me when I am on his left side. Especially in this course, it is my role to help the client understand the importance of the photograph. It's what this course revolves around and I truly want my client to be able to see how much he can express with one picture or five or ten!
In this setting, I am a teacher. I am a student. Both in one.
We also have the Rollins instructors as well as UCF who are able to help us throughout this semester being able to work with and better understand why our clients have the certain disabilities that they have, as well as helping us recognize when improvements are being made.