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IT Accessibility: What Campus Leaders Have to Say (6-minute Version)

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    (Michael Young) we are committed to the notion
    that everyone should have an opportunity
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    to participate in higher education
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    whether it be from the learning perspective
    or the research perspective
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    or an opportunity to work here
    at this institution.
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    We benefit from that because we get
    to enjoy the talents and the skills
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    of those people who come in
    and also their perspective
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    which in many cases will be different
    from the perspective of others on campus
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    so accessibility becomes a very
    important value at the university.
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    (Tracy Mitrano) We're a
    leading university globally.
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    We want the best talent
    in the world
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    for our students, our staff,
    and our faculty
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    and we want to be sure
    if that talent has a disability
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    that they know that we
    are a welcoming community.
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    (Pablo Molina) We are competing with other
    prestigious and highly accomplished institutions.
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    We want to make sure that we
    can target the right candidates
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    to join our community regardless
    of their disability status.
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    (Edward Ray) In fact we genuinely believe that
    excellence is achieved through diversity
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    and that a commitment
    to equity and inclusion
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    really enriches each of our lives.
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    (Michael Young) What the university
    offers and makes available
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    has to be offered to everybody.
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    We can't afford to waste the talents or the brilliance
    or the minds of anybody
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    and making things accessible
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    allows everybody to engage in the university.
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    (Tracy Mitrano) Think about accommodation as really
    the beginning of the conversation about disability.
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    It was the appropriate measure that was
    taken in the Americans with Disabilities Act
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    that was passed in 1990
    and that's well over a generation ago.
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    I think now we really
    have to think less about
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    how we're going to measure
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    specifically this accommodation and
    that accommodation
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    and recognize that we can make accessibility
    open and available
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    so that individual staff,
    faculty, or students
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    do not have to go
    to get an accommodation.
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    It will be automatically available
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    in the web page that they visit,
    in the device that they use.
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    (Gerry Hanley) The first
    step really needs to be
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    an assessment of where we are
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    so we can then inform our planning
    process,
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    develop plans,
    implement a project,
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    and then really assess
    the results of it.
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    (Pablo Molinda) Key to our approach
    to making sure that our campus
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    and our technology is accessible
    to people with disabilities
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    is to ensure we do this by design.
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    This is not an afterthought that we do
    after we have implemented a new classroom.
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    Instead this is something that we do from the
    initial conception of a new project or idea.
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    The same way we do this for
    privacy and security
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    we do this for accessibility.
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    (Tracy Mitrano) A policy
    really is an important way to go
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    because it will focus everyone's
    attention.
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    It's also probably the way that you have
    to go now that there are legal pressures
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    on higher education in this area.
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    The second thing I would say about policy is
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    there really are two types in general.
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    One is a policy that you have
    because you have a law.
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    For example, the Family Education Rights
    Privacy Act policy.
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    So you want to be clear and sure
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    that you're going to have
    compliance on your campus.
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    There's another kind of policy
    that I would call aspirational policy.
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    And maybe accessibility
    fits a little bit in both.
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    But you most certainly can err
    on the aspirational side.
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    An aspirational policy is something
    you establish for your institution
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    as a path moving toward something,
    moving forward.
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    It does not have to have
    100 percent compliance
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    because it's really a direction that you're
    setting strategically for your institution.
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    (Gerry Hanley) We begin with our vendors saying
    (a) this is not only important,
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    that this is required
    for working with the CSU.
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    Every student who comes
    into our institution
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    we have to provide equally effective
    access to those service
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    and you are a partner
    in delivering those services to us.
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    So we will tell you
    what we need
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    and then we will help you
    inform your staff, educate your staff,
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    provide them some consultation and guidance
    in partnership with us
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    so you can deliver
    the successful service for us.
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    (Bruce Maas) If we go about things
    in an ad hoc approach, one by one,
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    we're not likely
    to get the same results
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    as if we work together as a community
    in higher education
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    to work with vendors
    to improve accessibility for everyone
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    with regard to the products
    that are offered.
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    That's a much more pragmatic approach,
    rather than institution by institution.
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    (Gerry Hanley) Making accessibility a priority
    in their development roadmap
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    is going to be driven
    by the market demand
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    and if an institution
    never says a word,
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    the vendor isn't gonna
    do anything about it.
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    So if we begin to communicate
    our demands collectively,
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    then the vendor will recognize
    the market value of accessibility.
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    (Michael Young) Accessibility requires effort
    on the part of everyone
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    in the higher education community
    - faculty, staff, technology vendors.
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    If we all do our part,
    our institutions can provide everyone
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    with an equal opportunity
    to participate
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    and we all benefit from the
    perspectives of a diverse group.
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    (Edward Ray) I would say to those out there
    who are just getting started
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    or may be struggling to figure out
    how to use technology
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    to advance accessibility
    on their campuses that
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    there's no such thing
    as a bad time to start.
Title:
IT Accessibility: What Campus Leaders Have to Say (6-minute Version)
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
DO-IT
Duration:
06:48
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English subtitles

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