Her major is in International Relations and she loves to travel. She uses her tricycle for long trips. The 22-year-old student is a person of short stature and has pseudoachondroplasia. REHACARE.com spoke with her about her first impressions and experiences during her stay abroad.
Ms. Schöne, you currently study two semesters in Italy as part of the Erasmus exchange program. How do Italians treat people with visible disabilities like yours?
Andrea Schöne: Based on my experience, Italians have a more natural and open approach to a visible disability. Right from the start, I was not being stared at as much. Once when I had trouble getting up on the sidewalk, a store owner from across the street ran over and helped me. The willingness to help is far greater here than it is in Germany – even when I am not able to reach items on shelves when I shop for example. The supermarket near me even has a sign that states wheelchair users and older persons take priority.
I also see people both with physical and so-called cognitive disabilities on the street and in public every day. Just recently, a person with an electric wheelchair was approaching me at my university. This is not necessarily a given at German universities.
How do you rank the education system in Italy as a student?
Schöne: The Italian education system is a downright dream for students with disabilities. Since 1978, Italy no longer has special schools for students with disabilities. In Bologna and Forlì I have seen schools that added special ramps for wheelchair users so that students no longer need to enter the premises through the back entrance. Before my studies, I completed a language course in Bologna to improve my Italian language skills. I spoke with employees there and told them that I encountered great difficulties in Germany attending a regular school. They couldn’t even fathom that.
I also spoke with several other Italian friends about this and they were also surprised that things are this bad in Germany. Many of them had classmates with disabilities and thus seem far more open-minded towards people with disabilities. Incidentally, the Forlì Branch of the University of Bologna is also well designed: on the one hand, the School of Political Sciences building has a completely accessible design and I am able to reach every room with an elevator. On the other hand, every lecture hall features reserved seating for wheelchair users with a desk that can be added. Unfortunately, my university in Germany is not so well equipped.