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Accessibility, diversity and disability dolls spark conversations in the classroom

Interactive characters with disabilities are staying with the students of St. Andrew's to teach them what disability means.

Interactive characters will be bringing disability awareness to students of St. Andrew's Elementary School

Ashley Martin-Hanlon does presentations with these dolls with a variety of physical, sensory and invisible disabilities. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

Celebrating diversity comes in all shapes and sizes, just like the disability dolls at an 'I Can Too' presentation at St. Andrew's Elementary School.

Ashley Martin-Hanlon, communications co-ordinator for Easter Seals, visits classrooms for her presentation with the disability dolls.

Cody Loveless joins Ashley Martin-Hanlon of Easter Seals for I Can Too! presentations at St. Andrew's Elementary School in St. John's. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

"We cover physical, sensory, and invisible disabilities I do a little bit of teaching around what Easter Seals is and what disability means," Martin-Hanlon said.

"The dolls are really the stars of the presentation. There's a doll with each type of disability in the that we talk about — so there's dolls with physical disabilities, dolls with sensory disabilities, and one doll with an invisible disability."

These dolls are used to teach elementary students about different kinds of disabilities. (Alyson Samson/CBC)

This year's presentations were also the launch of a new interactive character project — each class gets a character on card stock to take back to their classroom.

Each character represents a different type of disability, and they're there to remind the class to think differently about how to accommodate those with different abilities.

"We're hoping that they'll do everything that the class does," Martin-Hanlon said.

"We're hoping that they'll go on field trips, and we're hoping that they'll go to the lunchroom, and we're hoping that they might go home with some students but we want students to be thinking about what would be necessary to make that possible."

Characters like these are hung in classrooms as reminders for students to think about inclusivity in their daily life. (Submitted.)

The characters are designed to make students think critically about things like where would be practical for a classmate in a wheelchair to sit or how would they get access to their house at home.

"We want them to be thinking about disability past this 45-minute presentation," Martin-Hanlon said.

The card stock characters are Martin-Hanlon's brainchild — she came up with the concept so that she could leave reminders for students behind after her presentations.

"I really hated having to pack up the dolls after 45 minutes and leave so I wanted something that could remain in the classroom and continue the conversation," she said.