Vision rehabilitation students train at Scotland’s Milngavie station

Picture of Janine Booth

Share:

Vision rehabilitation students train at Scotland’s Milngavie station

Share:

Picture of Janine Booth

Share:

Scotrail logo
Credit: ScotRail

Students from Caledonian University’s Graduate Diploma in Low Vision Rehabilitation took part in practical training at station on Wednesday 25 October.

The training used a stationed train at Milngavie station, which was upgraded three years ago, to give the future vision rehabilitation specialists hands-on experience in teaching visually-impaired people to access railway travel safely.

Milngavie platform
Milngavie station platform // Credit: Network Rail

It provided the students with knowledge and experience that they can use to teach a client the route to the railway station using a long cane, and also gave them skills to familiarise the person with the main features of the station and train.

provided the facilities for the training as part of its efforts to make rail travel more accessible.

Patrick Nyamurundira, ScotRail Access and Inclusion Manager, said: “ScotRail is committed to making the railway accessible for all, and we will do everything we can to ensure as many people as possible can access our services.

“Facilitating training sessions like this play a key role helping to build confidence, and allowing visually impaired people to travel independently and safely on ‘s Railway.”

Simon Labbett, guest lecturer at Glasgow Caledonian University, said: “Giving blind and partially sighted people the confidence to use public transport is absolutely essential.

“Thanks to ScotRail’s generous initiative, Scotland’s next generation of vision rehab specialists will feel more confident in promoting access to train travel with their clients.”

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles