approaching those of sighted print readers.
==== Access to Literacy, Education, and Vocation ====
The mo... slow, laborious tracing of embossed letterforms. Access to literacy opened, in turn, access to education, employment, and civic participation in ways that had be... abled tablets and e-readers have greatly expanded access to braille materials, but their cost — with the m
rather than through immediate adult labour market access. This finding reinforced the importance of early ... n the United States, measuring each institution's access rate (the fraction of students from the bottom in... vealed that many elite universities have very low access rates — that they enroll more students from the t... from the bottom sixty percent combined — and that access rates vary enormously across institutions of simi
, initiatives, and programs that aimed to improve access to quality education and promote social progress.... ginalized populations. Her advocacy for equitable access to education, resources, and opportunities helped... initiatives that focused on expanding educational access, improving school infrastructure, and enhancing c
Archives// (EPAA), the first peer-reviewed, open-access academic journal in education. Launched well before open access became a movement, EPAA was a deliberate politica... more than a decade the broader movement for open access to publicly funded research that has since transf
oups reproduce their position across generations: access to particular schools, universities, and professi... butional consequences of schooling — to who gains access, under what conditions, and with what structural ... groups monopolise valued resources by restricting access to outsiders — later scholars developed a Weberia
-career researchers, providing the kind of direct access to international scientific culture that the coun... ding vocational training for young people without access to conventional educational pathways. These activ... preconditions of learning — security, community, access — are not separable from its content, and that a
ailblazer in advocating for equitable educational access for Black women and challenging discriminatory pr... tions to education, emphasizing the importance of access to quality education, social justice, and the emp
lenging traditional norms that restricted women's access to education. Additionally, the society introduce... g individuals from underprivileged backgrounds to access educational opportunities on a global scale.
The
, enslaved, and indigenous children had no formal access to schooling at all. The school predated by more ... rous instruction anticipated later struggles over access to higher education, STEM pathways, and equal pay
ary schooling at the Promise Academy, and college access and transition services through the Promise Neigh... Academy, students experience longer school days, access to highly qualified teachers, and a campus cultur
Financial inequality meant that people could not access the medical care that would prevent or treat such... ide for one fare and for expanded Braille library access.
* Keller, H. (1967). //Helen Keller, her soci
m: State Compulsion, Parental Duty, and Universal Access ====
Beyond his philosophical account, Mill cont... ns for subsequent arguments expanding educational access to all marginalised groups. Mill's insistence tha
th of communities." His work has framed universal access to high-quality early childhood education as simu... bservation to reach teachers who cannot otherwise access high-quality mentorship.
**3. System scaffolds:*
ve oral and written communication; the ability to access and analyse information; and curiosity and imagin... ns that enable all students — not only those with access to elite institutions — to develop the competence
co-education — including girls — and of universal access was genuinely radical. He also insisted on the co... perience to rule, the universality of educational access — and gave them a systematic, published, and ther