September 24, 2018

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THE VARSITY September 24, 2018

University of Toronto's Student Newspaper since 1880

Vol. CXXXIX, No. 4

“Ableist and discriminatory content” described at training sessions for test invigilators

In conversation with municipal candidates for Mississauga’s Ward 8

Spotlight on affordable housing, public transit, job opportunities

Invigilators at Test and Exam Services speak out against training

Ilya Bañares Deputy News Editor

On October 22, Mississauga will elect its mayor, councillors, and school board trustees. In advance of the fall date, The Varsity spoke to four of the six candidates running for council in Ward 8, which contains the UTM campus. The candidates spoke about student issues ranging from affordable and safe housing to public transit. Candidates Abdul Azeem Baig and Amadeus Blazys could not be reached for an interview.

Josie Kao News Editor

Invigilators at Test and Exam Services (TES) are speaking out over what they see as discriminatory training sessions, which have been described as “clearly [pathologizing] students with disabilities.” TES is “the department responsible for coordinating quiz, term test, and final examination accommodations for students with documented disabilities,” according to its website. It employs roughly 40 to 45 “highly-qualified graduate students” to act as invigilators. The issue regarding training sessions was first brought to light by a Facebook post made by an invigilator who had attended a training session on September 5. In her post, which has been shared over 100 times, graduate student Elizabeth Davis wrote that “the training contained strong ableist and discriminatory content which is inappropriate and wrong to disseminate in a training environment for Invigilators working with students with disabilities.” In particular, she and other invigilators took issue with two presentation slides that they believed described students with disabilities as “difficult” and comparable to US President Donald Trump. The slides were presented as part of their training to become invigilators. In an interview with The Varsity, Senior Director of Student Experience David Newman clarified that those slides were part of general de-escalation training given by the Student Progress and Support Team and were not specific to students with disabilities. “The training was really about dealing with difficult situations and it was not about any specific group and it was not developed specifically for this group,” said Newman. Newman continued that this presentation is given to many groups on campus, though he did not specify which ones. “It’s a general type of presentation that is given to any group that there’s a large population of at the university… It’s a wide range of groups that training is provided to.” Davis questioned the university’s explanation, saying that “if they weren’t there to talk about students with disabilities, why were they training us?” “They’re invited to come train people who work with students with disabilities and they weren’t

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Test, page 3

Matt Mahoney Mahoney is the incumbent councillor for Ward 8, a seat he’s held since 2014, and one which his mother, Katie Mahoney, previously held for 23 years. Speaking to The Varsity, he said that he’s very “proud” of his track record in community projects. “We’ve created… community-based facilities that UTM students can access, whether it’s multi-use courts, whether it’s new park land, whether it’s transit investment,” said Mahoney. On affordable and safe housing, Mahoney believes that U of T and other universities should improve their current situation, especially due to their growing numbers. “This year at UTM was the highest [intake of ] first-year students that the university has ever had, and yet they didn’t expand their housing on campus,” he noted. “I 100 per cent support and have been encouraging the university to invest more money in housing to make sure that local students as well as foreign students have a safe and quality place to live.” On public transit, Mahoney said that his office has met with Mayor Bonnie Crombie, the University of Toronto Mississauga Students’ Union, and the university administration to discuss collaborating with other municipalities, including Brampton, to have “one pass with one fee that the students can access.” On job opportunities for students, Mahoney claimed that Mississauga regularly attracts Fortune 500 companies, and said that the city is an essential base of human capital due to its large student presence. “We’ve got economic development promoting the University of Toronto Mississauga and vice versa to ensure that students have a quality job,” he said. “What we want is the students who come from outside of Mississauga or outside of the country to stay in Mississauga.” Candidates, page 3

Comment

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September 24, 2018 by The Varsity - Issuu