Comparison of Descriptive English Compositions of Visually Impaired and Sighted Students in Kenyan Secondary Schools
Abstract
Language is common to visually impaired and sighted students because they both use language to
communicate ideas, feelings, and emotions and above all to describe their worlds. Descriptive
writing brings alive the object of description, be it real or imagined. To do this effectively, it heavily
exploits sensory details, sight being key among them. Descriptive essay writing is one of the topics
tested in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Examination (henceforth KCSE) that is sat by both
categories of students. However, there have been few attempts to comparatively study the
descriptive characteristics of English compositions of visually impaired and those of sighted
students. The information is crucial in determining whether the visually impaired learners are
disadvantaged in any way. This is where this paper comes in. Purposive sampling was used to
select Salvation Army (S.A) Thika High School for the Visually Challenged Persons and Broadway
High School, both found within Thika Municipality in Thika District, Kiambu County in Kenya.
The population of the study comprised the following categories of Form Three students; the totally
visually impaired, the partially sighted from S.A Thika and sighted from Broadway. Form Three
and Form Four teachers of English were also part of the sample. Data was collected from
descriptive compositions written by the students and from questionnaires and interview schedules
administered to the sampled teachers. Compositions written by visually impaired students were
debrailled. Words and phrases were then extracted from the compositions according to the various
senses. They were analysed in order to determine whether they were used in equal measure by both
sighted and visually impaired students. Lexical density was then calculated, data presented in
tables and results discussed. The findings in this paper revealed that visually impaired students
used fewer descriptive terms in total and in all the senses than their sighted counterparts. The
sighted students predominately exploited the sense of sight in their description while the visually
impaired students mainly used the sense of hearing. The paper further established that even if all
the sensory details used by the visually impaired students were combined, they would not match
with the ones obtained from the sense of sight among the sighted students. The paper therefore
concluded that there is a true correlation between sightedness and descriptive writing. The
following recommendations were made: that the teachers deliberately present as many first-hand
descriptive concepts in class as possible to the visually impaired students; schools for the visually
impaired consider admitting sighted students to learn together with the visually impaired for more
linguistic input; KNEC consider adapting descriptive composition topics to avoid disadvantaging
the visually impaired students.