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Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota. NW Health Sciences University. Goals, Guiding Principles, and Fundamental ValuesWe will create an institutional culture that values and cultivates respect, responsibility, diversity and communication.We will establish a working and learning environment that fosters equity, respect, trust and the opportunity for personal and professional development.We will provide programs and support services that respond to the changing9453
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1. Northwestern Health Sciences University
February 15, 2007
Barbara Blacklock, MA, LISW
Disability Services, University of Minnesota
Black005@umn.edu
2. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota
3. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Legal Foundations Section 504 Rehabilitation Act 1973
American Disability Act 1990
Minnesota Human Rights Act
4. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Meaningful Access Access Environments
Physical
Programmatic
Informational
Attitudinal
5. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Models of Disability Medical Model
Disability is a deficiency or abnormality
Being disabled is negative
Disability resides in the individual
The remedy is cure or normalization of the individual
The agent of remedy is the professional
Carol Gill, Chicago Institute of Disability Research Socio-Political Model
Disability is a difference
Being disabled, in itself, is neutral
Disability derives from the interaction between the individual and society
The remedy is a change in the interaction between the individual and society
The agent of remedy is the individual, an advocate, or anyone who affects the arrangements between the individual and society
6. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota What is a Disability? A person has a disability if he or she has a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits one or more major life
activities:
Walking Standing Seeing
Speaking Hearing Breathing
Learning Working Self-care
7. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Common Disability Conditions Invisible Disabilities
Psychiatric
Learning
Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Systemic Disabilities
Sensory Impairments
Physical Disabilities
Brain Injury
8. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Reasonable Accommodations A reasonable accommodation is a modification or
adjustment to a course, program, service, job,
facility or activity that enables a qualified person
with a disability to have an equal opportunity to
participate.
9. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Determining Reasonable Accommodations “Person with a disability”
“Otherwise qualified”
What are the barriers?
What are possible accommodations?
Does the individual have meaningful access?
Would accommodations compromise essential elements of the curriculum or position?
10. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Role of Student Affairs Obtain and maintain medical/psychological documentation in a confidential manner.
Determine if a condition is a disability.
Identify and assist with the implementation of reasonable accommodations.
Communicate accommodation needs in writing.
Modify accommodations as needed.
Provide consultation and problem-solving.
11. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Role of Faculty Referral to Student Affairs.
Participate in the process to determine and implement reasonable accommodations.
Identify essential course components for accommodations to be determined.
Request assistance (from Student Affairs) with accommodations, implementation, or consultation.
12. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Role of Student Request reasonable accommodations.
Provide medical and/or psychological documentation to Student Affairs.
Participate in the process of determining and implementing reasonable accommodations.
Inform Student Affairs when accommodations are not working, need to be modified, or symptoms change.
13. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Common Accommodations Exam Accommodations
Coursework Modifications
Classroom Accommodations
Programmatic Accommodations
14. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Proactive Approaches Use a Disability Services syllabus statement.
Refer students to Student Affairs.
Participate in the process to determine and implement reasonable accommodations.
Identify essential course or program components.
Request assistance from Student Affairs as needed.
Incorporate the Principles of Universal Design for Curriculum into your instruction.
15. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Sample Syllabus Statement
The University of Minnesota is committed to providing all students equal access to
learning opportunities. Disability Services is the campus office that works with students
who have disabilities to provide and/or arrange reasonable accommodations. Students
registered with Disability Services, who have a letter requesting accommodations, are
encouraged to contact the instructor early in the semester. Students who have, or think
they may have, a disability (e.g. psychiatric, attentional, learning, vision, hearing, physical,
or systemic), are invited to contact Disability Services for a confidential discussion at
612-626-1333 (V/TTY) or at ds@umn.edu. Additional information is available at the DS
website http://ds.umn.edu.
16. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Universal Instructional Design (UID) The basic premise of UID is that curriculum should be designed to include
alternatives to make it accessible and applicable to students with different
backgrounds, learning styles, abilities and disabilities, with little need
for additional adaptation or retrofitting.
Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST)
UID does not remove academic challenges; it removes barriers to
learning for all qualified students.
17. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota
18. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota
19. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota Additional Information on UID FacultyWare
http://www.facultyware.uconn.edu/home.htm
Center for Applied Special Technology
http://CAST.org
Center for Teaching Effectiveness
http://www.cte.udel.edu/bestpract.htm
DO-IT Universal Design of Instruction
http://www.washington.edu/doit/Brochures/
20. Barbara Blacklock, Disability Services, University of Minnesota If a student discusses their disability with you… Respect confidentiality.
Focus on the person, not the disability.
Ask yourself: Why do I need to know? before asking a disability-related question.
Focus on removing educational barriers and providing an equal opportunity.