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Accessibility Is a Right Not a Privilege

Green rectangle with boy in profile. Boy has olive skin and brown hair and is wearing a hearing aid and white tshirt with orange sleeves. Dark green text " Accessibility is a right not a privilege." Ollibean

Accessibility is a right not a privilege.

20 posts on Accessibility, Universal Design, and Inclusion

 

It’s Time to Go Beyond Access

Creating Equal Opportunities For ALL Students to Participate in School Athletics

State Obligations UNESCO

Accessible Instructional Materials (AIM)

Inclusion Is A Right Not A Privilege

Paula Kluth on The Inclusive Class Roundtable

The National Center on Accessible Instructional Materials

Why Would We Want Inclusive Education?

Ollibean Spotlight: Kerima Cevik Pay It Forward Activist

How AAC and assistive tech make classrooms better for all : Paula Kluth

The Case for Inclusion Part 3: Sea Change

Access to the General Curriculum for Students with Disabilities: A Brief Legal Interpretation

Free iPad Games to Improve Algebra Learning from CAST

Inclusive Educational Practices for Students with Special Needs

Don Johnston Announces Snap&Read—A Simple Toolbar That Reads Any Text On-screen

ASL -STEM: Expanding American Sign Language’s Place in the Sciences

Accessible Leeds

University Students Design Tray to Fit Most Walkers and Wheelchairs

Intersection of Law, Education and Civil Rights

Deaf Teenager Gets AMC to Offer Closed Captioning

 

 

2016-11-10T10:11:32-05:00By Ollibean|Categories: Accessibility, Accommodations, Advocacy In Action, Assistive Technology, Author, Autism, blog, Cross Disability, General, Inclusion, Inclusive Education, Lauri Swann Hunt, Search Categories, Videos|Tags: Accessibility, all disabilities, autism, Autism Spectrum Disorders, cross disability, inclusion, inclusive education, special needs, Special Needs Parenting, UDL, universal design|1 Comment

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About the Author: Ollibean

Ollibean is a dynamic community of parents, families and advocates in the disability community working together for a more socially just, accessible and inclusive world.

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One Comment

  1. Students with Disabilities Excel with High Expectations, Access, and Inclusion August 14, 2014 at 2:40 pm - Reply

    […] Duncan said. “We know that when students with disabilities are held to high expectations and have access to the general curriculum in the regular classroom, they excel. We must be honest about student […]

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