|
Return to Table of Contents / Previous Article / Next Article

Supporting Outdoor Adventures:
CH's Story
(Sidebar in original publication)
C.H., age 35, was in an accident when he was 14 that resulted in a traumatic brain injury. He lives fairly independently in an assisted living complex and works in the community as part of a supported team of people with brain injuries. Hes successful in his home and work environments, but his brain injury does play a role in his life, as it always will. C.H. sometimes feels as though he is stuck at age 14.
C.H. has been coming to Wilderness Inquiry with the Friday afternoon group for over a year. He likes volunteering because it gives him an opportunity to get out into the community and be productive. He can practice the skills he knows and learn new ones without paying an instructor. He also enjoys the environment at WI. The people are nice and it doesnt feel as rigid as paid work can be sometimes.
C.H. recently participated in a special program at WI that focused on further developing the social skills that help him to be accepted in integrated settings. He and nine other individuals with cognitive disabilities went on a five-day camping and canoeing adventure in Voyageurs National Park during which staff helped participants learn how to work cooperatively in a wilderness setting. He had a good time, in spite of the mosquitoes always finding the one place missed by the repellant.
Contributed by C.H. and by Jill M McKibbons at TBI Metro Services.
Top
Return to Table of Contents / Previous Article / Next Article
Resources: Resources and Related ICI Publications
__________
Citation: Shoultz, B., Miller, E.E., & Ness, J. (2001). Impact: Feature Issue on Volunteerism by Persons with Developmental Disabilities, 14(2) [online]. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, Institute on Community Integration. Available from http://ici.umn.edu/products/impact/142/.
__________
Hard copies of Impact are available from the Publications Office of the Institute on Community Integration. The first copy of this issue is free; additional copies are $4 each. You can request copies by phone at 612-624-4512 or E-mail at icipub@umn.edu, or you can fax or mail us an order form. See our listing of other issues of Impact for more information.
The print design version (PDF, 448K, 28 pp.) of this issue of Impact is also available for free, complete with the color layout and photographs. This version looks the most like the newsletter as it was printed.

The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity employer and educator.
|