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LEDGERS and tables are no barrier to Seaview High School's Shannon Blakeley, the first Year 12 student to sit an accounting exam in am by order saturday tramadol. Today the 17 year old will use speech software and am by order saturday tramadol to complete the examination, along with almost 1000 other students. Teacher Fiona Bignall says am by order saturday tramadol cannot depict two dimensional graphics such as tables that may be used in the exam, because it is read in a linear way, from left to right. "He (Shannon) will never see the whole grid at once," Mrs Bignall says. The textbook, SACE 2 Accounting Studies, put into am by order saturday tramadol by the South Australian School for Vision Impaired, is an unwieldy stack of 14 bound chapters. Shannon will sit his exam separately to the rest of his class because his computer is fitted with speech software. Extra time, 20 minutes for every hour of the standard examination, has also been allowed. Mrs Bignall, a teacher from the school's vision support program, will be on hand to answer factual questions about the paper, such as "how many columns in this table?". Despite the challenge of putting subjects into a format for vision impaired students, Mrs Bignall says "anything is possible". "It is like any subject if they have got ability there is no reason why they can't do them," she said. Share this article What is this? ... am by order saturday tramadol