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Resources for Disabled Academics

We maintain a growing list of resources for students, faculty, researchers with disabilities, and their prospective employers. It includes resources on UW campuses and beyond.

Have a resource to add? Contact Liz Diether-Martin, CREATE Web Specialist, at lizdm@uw.edu.

A great place to start for UW students, faculty, staff, and visitors is the UW Accessibility website. It lists information, tools, and services for people with disabilities and all of us who interact with them.

AccessADVANCE:
Support for women with disabilities in STEM faculty careers

The AccessADVANCE initiative serves to increase the successful participation and advancement of under-represented populations with disabilities in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) faculty careers. It includes resources, webinars, and an online community of practice for engagement with others who are interested in working toward this goal.

AccessComputing:
Increasing the participation of people with disabilities in computing fields

UW AccessComputing connects students with disabilities to mentors and professionals for internships, research experiences, scholarships and other resources and opportunities in computing fields.

  • For: undergraduate students, graduate students
  • Resources: mentoring, IT support, scholarships, internships

AccessSTEM Project:
Increasing the participation of people with disabilities in STEM careers

AccessSTEM is a DO-IT project that works with a leadership team that represents stakeholders including postsecondary institutions, precollege STEM educators, disability services, veteran associations, projects that broaden participation in STEM, and industry and career services.

  • For: precollege STEM educators, disability services, veterans associations, projects that broaden participation in STEM, and industry and career services
  • Resources: Policy advocacy and implementation; fostering of systemic changes through mentoring and peer support communities, job shadows, informational interviews, internships, and leadership events; and communities of practice.

Office of the ADA Coordinator (UW):
Accessibility guidance and information across UW campuses

The Office of the ADA Coordinator offers accessibility guidance and information across the UW. Highlights include information on service animals, barrier reporting, and accessibility practices as well as high-level strategic work initiated by the ADA & Accessibility Steering Committee and ADA Coordinator Advisory Groups.  

Aspirations in Computing:
National network of peers supporting success in technology

Aspirations in Computing strives to make sure technology is being developed by a population as diverse as its users. A program within the National Center for Women & Information Technology (NCWIT).

  • For: students, higher ed educators, K-12 educators
  • Resources: awards, scholarships, internships, communities, free and easy-to-use resources

C-STAR Collaborative:
Collaborative Mentorship Funding

The Center for Smart Use of Technologies to Assess Real World Outcomes (C-STAR) was born out of a need to equip investigators with the skills and knowledge to accurately employ technologies to measure and interpret data relevant to sensorimotor and cognitive function in the lab, clinic and real world. It is part of the Medical Rehabilitation Research Resource Network (MR3) of the National Institutes of Health. 

  • For: early-career rehabilitation researchers
  • Resources: mentoring from senior scientists and clinicians, financial and educational support

Center for Minorities and People with Disabilities in IT:
Academic Careers Workshop

The national Center for Minorities and People with Disabilities in Information Technology, or CMD-IT, promotes innovation that enriches, enhances, and enables the African Americans/Blacks, Native Americans/Indigenous People, Hispanics/Latinx, and People with Disabilities communities, such that more equitable and sustainable contributions are possible by all communities.

The D Center:
Meeting space in the HUB and an inclusive community

The D Center (Disability and d/Deaf Cultural Center) is a space and community where students can celebrate disability and D/deaf pride and foster community at the UW and beyond. Located in the HUB, the center fosters community, shares resources, and hosts events.

  • For: UW students, faculty and staff
  • Resources: inclusive meeting space, networking, and social, cultural, and educational programming

The DO-IT Center:
Scholarships for students with disabilities

The DO-IT (Disabilities, Opportunities, Internetworking, and Technology) Center is dedicated to empowering people with disabilities through technology and education. It promotes awareness and accessibility—in both the classroom and the workplace—to maximize the potential of individuals with disabilities and make our communities more vibrant, diverse, and inclusive.

  • For: high school students, college students, educators, employers
  • Resources: scholarships, assistance with adaptive technology and resources, college and career readiness, networking, accessible instruction tools, communities of practice, …

CRA-WP IDEALS Workshop:
Grad cohort workshop for Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Accessibility, and Leadership Skills (IDEALS)

Sponsored by CRA-WP, the workshop is two days of interacting with senior computing researchers and professionals who share pertinent information on graduate school survival skills, as well as more personal information and insights about their experiences. 

  • For: graduate students with disabilities
  • Resources: workshop, networking, connecting

Last Mile Education Fund:
Grants to support low-income grad students in need

The Last Mile Education Fund offers a disruptive approach to increasing diversity in tech and engineering fields by addressing critical gaps in financial support for students within four semesters of graduation.  

  • For: low-income and underrepresented undergraduate students enrolled in computing-related degree program who face challenges beyond their control
  • Resources: funding to complete undergraduate program

Lime Connect:
Fellowship and scholarship programs

Lime Connect is a non-profit organization concerned with rebranding disability through achievement by connecting professionals and students with disabilities to careers, internships, fellowships and mentoring with top fortune 500 companies across the United States and Canada.

Switzer Research Fellowship Program:
Support for researchers with disabilities to perform research that supports people with disabilities

The purpose of the Switzer Research Fellow Program is to build research capacity by providing support to researchers, including those with disabilities, to perform research on rehabilitation, independent living, and other experiences and outcomes of individuals with disabilities.

Tapia Celebration for Diversity in Computing 

Annual conference presented by The Center for Minorities and People with Disabilities in Information Technology to bring together people from all backgrounds and ethnicities.

  • For: students, faculty, researchers and professionals in computing with disabilities
  • Resources: conference for celebration, connection inspiration
  • More info: tapiaconference.cmd-it.org

Teach Access 

Collaboration of educational institutions, technology industry, and advocates for people with disabilities with the mission to make the fundamentals of digital accessibility, design principles, and best practices a larger part of undergrad education. 


Advocacy news from CREATE


  • Three Myths and Three Actions: “Accommodating” Disabled Students

    February 29, 2024 Excerpted from the Winter 2024 Allen School DEIA newsletter article contributed by CREATE Ph.D. students Kelly Avery Mack and Ather Sharif, with Lucille Njoo. Completing graduate school is difficult for any student, but it’s especially difficult when you’re trying to learn at an institution that isn’t built for you. Students with disabilities…

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  • Alice Wong and Patty Berne: Two UW lectures moderated by CREATE researchers

    Winter 2024 quarter kicked off with two outstanding conversations with women of color who are leaders in disability justice. Alice Wong: Raising the visibility of disabled people First, Alice Wong discussed topics important to her work in raising the visibility of disabled people. Wong’s book Year of the Tiger: An Activist’s Life was the topic of…

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  • Recommended Reading: Parenting with a Disability

    October 16, 2023 Two recent publications address unnecessary challenges faced by parents with disabilities and how those challenges are made extraordinary by a legal system that is not protecting parents or their children. Rocking the Cradle: Ensuring the Rights of Parents with Disabilities and Their Children The National Council on Disability report finds that roughly…

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  • Research at the Intersection of Race, Disability and Accessibility

    October 13, 2023 What are the opportunities for research to engage the intersection of race and disability? What is the value of considering how constructs of race and disability work alongside each other within accessibility research studies? Two CREATE Ph.D. students have explored these questions and found little focus on this intersection within accessibility research.…

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  • CREATE's Response to Proposed Update to Section 504 for Medical, Health

    Updated November 30, 2023 The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) Office for Civil Rights published a proposed update to the HHS regulations implementing Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which prohibits disability discrimination by recipients of federal funding. CREATE’s official response, in collaboration with peer researchers, is posted on the Regulations.gov…

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