25 Ways DO-IT Is Changing The World
- Listening to the concerns of people with disabilities.
- Promoting the view that disability is one aspect of the diverse human experience.
- Expecting people with disabilities to excel.
- Teaching parents to set high expectations for students with disabilities.
- Providing resources to precollege and postsecondary educators.
- Connecting individuals with disabilities to mentors and facilitating their engagement.
- Hosting college-preparation camps for youth with disabilities.
- Promoting inclusive learning environments.
- Identifying future leaders with disabilities.
- Highlighting success stories of people with disabilities.
- Hiring people with disabilities as staff and interns.
- Partnering with employers to encourage the hiring of individuals with disabilities.
- Sharing the history of the disability civil rights movement.
- Educating people about legal mandates for access.
- Promoting access to empowering technology.
- Demonstrating accessible science equipment.
- Advancing universal design of instruction, physical spaces, technology, and services.
- Promoting accessibility topics within computing and engineering curriculum.
- Creating and sharing videos about equal access.
- Captioning videos and encouraging others to do the same.
- Advocating for accessibility of websites, documents, and software.
- Promoting accessible online learning.
- Promoting accessible conferences, meetings, and events.
- Connecting stakeholders through regional and national workshops.
- Publishing best practices for others to replicate.
And How You Can Help
- Mentor a person with a disability.
- Learn more about assistive technologies (e.g., screen readers, alternative keyboards and mice) and help people with disabilities get access to them.
- Share success stories of people with disabilities.
- Talk about disability as a normal part of the human experience and celebrate disability as one aspect of diversity.
- Everywhere you go, think about accessibility for individuals with a wide range of abilities, and make suggestions to those in charge.
- Volunteer at programs for youth with disabilities.
- Expect people with disabilities to show up in every environment and prepare for them.
- Attend professional development opportunities about supporting individuals with disabilities.
- Understand the history of civil rights for people with disabilities.
- Learn how universal design can impact access to education, physical spaces, services, and technology.
- Caption your videos and encourage others to do the same.
- Promote the accessible design of online learning, websites, and documents.
- Tell parents and teachers to set high expectations for students with disabilities.
Here are some resources to get you started: