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Game changer

Athina May|Published

HAPPY DAYS: Learners with Special Education Needs in Lentegeur enjoy their fully equipped park. Photo: Ayanda Ndamane/ANA HAPPY DAYS: Learners with Special Education Needs in Lentegeur enjoy their fully equipped park. Photo: Ayanda Ndamane/ANA

Pupils at the Lentegeur school for Learners with Special Education Needs (LSEN) got to try out their school’s first disability-friendly park as soon as the ribbon was cut on Thursday.

The state-of-the-art facility makes it easier for children with disabilities to enjoy activities like swinging and spinning.

It includes wheelchair swings, a wheelchair-friendly merry-go-round, sandpits and a jungle gym.

The project was created by the Nordex Group, which sponsored R345 000 after a former pupil, Cecil Muller, spoke to a staff member about his school.

Nordex Group accountant, Caroline Hendricks, told the Cape Argus: “I met Cecil in the Promenade Shopping Centre and he started talking to me about his school. I’d never heard of the school before and I decided to see for myself where the

school was.

“When I got here, I spoke to the school members and they said that they needed equipment. That’s when the wishlist started.”

School occupational therapist Joanna Deane said the park would assist with the physical and mental development of the pupils by enhancing the learning programme at the school.

“We identified the need to have suitable play equipment to accommodate all pupils and strive towards an inclusive and accessible play environment. This idea has become a reality and the end product is a beautiful and safe play area for all our children with special needs,” said Joanna.

Head of specialised education for metropole south, Guilot de Klerk, said the project created an ideal environment for work to take place through play.

“Playing is a full body activity that helps them develop skills they need. Running, dancing, climbing, rolling, these activities all foster muscle development,” said De Klerk.

Cape Argus