Webinar Six - A give and a request
by Joanna Schimizzi 8 months agoDuring this series, we've been sharing a lot of tools and supporting a lot of collaboration.
We know that you all have unique experiences and so much to share with others.
Please reply below and answer:
- What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
- What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
I would love to work with an accessiblity mentor when building OER courses so I can understand building a fully accessible course step-by-step.
I have extensive experience with developing and publishing OER in Pressbooks. If anyone wants to chat about using Pressbooks, I'm here!
I *LOVE* the idea of a mentor program! I love that this work requires professionals from a wide variety of backgrounds to produce the best resource possible - and every individual's talents and experience can shine throughout the process.
Happy to stay connected if you ever need an accessibility sounding board! :)
Request: I'd love for continuted contact to allow for an external check/review. In writing classes we always tell our students that having someone else look at your work is the mark of professional/serious writers, and having someone with experience available to look at a publication through "Accessibility Glasses" before we put it into classrooms would be valuable.
Share: Not yet, but eventually, we hope to have a relatively concise and practical set of guidelines to creating accessible documents for faculty who are writing instructional materials. We'd be happy to share that with you (and everyone else through OER commons) once it is ready.
To have a process in place at our institution to make sure that every course has accessiblity. Not just the training side but also the verification side. I feel that you can train all day long but if it is not implemented on campus by everyone, it falls short.
Some tricks that I have learned about making sure your course covers accessibility and student privacy.
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
To get more involved in how I can participate in getting the university to include accessibility as a routine in the development of their course work and campus wide. From the top down.
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series? Continue to have these cohorts on a regular basis. They were engaging and enlighting and I took several nuggets that I plan on sharing in my community.
Thank you!
Concrete accessibility standards and who is responsible for meeting those standards (instructor, course designer, etc.), as well as stronger support for enforcement of standards from top-level administration.
Support and idea generation for how to work around barriers, since many of us seem to be facing similar ones.
Ideally, creating an accessibility-first university, without faculty pushback, and with upper management support, would be the dream.
Unfortunately, I do not have much experience to offer with regard to OER.
I am not sure I have much to share with the community; I am a novice to accessible OER.
I want to keep accessibility at the forefront. I would like to know about any other series or training. :)
A request would be grant resources that could offset/compensate individual expenses for the work they undertake related to accessibility implementation/transformation.
I think it might seem small, but encouraging faculty/staff to search for internal or external funding sources to offset costs for OER that are not free but fall under "low cost materials" can still go a long way toward reducing costs to students while maintaining commitment to quality resources for coursework.
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? - To have our Accessibility Team become an advocate for accessibility and a means by which the university's awareness and commitment to accessibility continue to grow.
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series? Our team is creating an accessibility commitment statement that faculty can use in their syllabi to invite students to have a discussion with faculty of any accessibility needs they may have and raise both faculty and student awareness.
Request: I will download the application that you introduced us to during this training next week.
Search and learn more about how I can start the conversation with faculty and staff to
make accessibility in their routine.
I would like to know about any other series or training.
Offer : I prepared a lot of resources for the faculty and staff and infographics for digital accessibility. I would be happy to offer that to other members of this series.
I would love to see the real time before and after examples for materials. Like a no heading in a table and then with heading and explanation of benefits.
How to change a pdf to accessible docs - the easy way.
We need to be discussion UDL and Accessibility a lot more and I will present this at conferences and on my campus.
• What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
Institutional resources (time and money), collaborative space, and top-down support for accessibility and universal design for learning. We have amazing pockets of folks throughout our institution that are doing remarkable work, but I would love to see a cohesive effort that is broadly reinforced by key institutional leaership. I would love to see us truly live out a shared responsibility... but that's not going to happen by asking people to do the work without additional resources.
• What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
I am thrilled our project team will produce something practical and tangible to help folks understand the what and why behind accessibility - without just pushing technical standards that are frustrating to understand unless you are a developer.
I am also always interested in collaborating on disability and accessibility work. I am totally blind and do quite a bit of technical accessibility training, consultation, and advocacy. Please do not be a stranger!
Request - Continued community to glean ideas from and learn from.
Offer - I love helping faculty locate OER and other free resources for their courses.
The WRLC's TAWG (Textbook Affordability Working Group) representatives who have participated in the program will be using the resources to inform a DA Workshop for an OER Adopt stipend program we are currently managing. It is our hope that the OER profressional developmment workshop will provide a robust introduction to DA , reference material faculty can keep on hand and an opportunity to put theory into practice with an interactive component using their updated OER courseware.
Outside of unwavering support and a deep appreciation for the abundant knowledge sharing, our group is fairly new to this discussion. However, once the DA workshop has been completed, all associated material will be provided a CC BY license and it is our hope that it is used as often as possible by anyone who finds it useful.
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
I would love options for next-level training. I learned a lot in this training, but I often feel that in other places when I sign up for training, I don't get farther than SLIDE. Slide is great, and I feel that this training provided a lot of resources I can use to teach others. However, I think the trainers sometimes need a deeper knowledge so we can handle the advanced issues that come up.
I would also like training that breaks down information by specific LMSs because I suspect they don't always have the same background processes as documents. IE. Should I or shouldn't I use a title in Blackboard Ultra? I guess they have already made the page title heading 1, and their heading is heading 2, but I don't know.
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
I am signed up for advanced accessibility training with the International Association of Accessibility Professionals. I plan to study for and take the Certified Professional in Accessibility Core Competencies (CPACC) exam in the next six months. I would happily host a study group for others who want to level up their skills.
I agree
1. An entire office dedicated to Accessibility and OER! Having the budget to really transform our learning materials.
2. I can offer more insight about accessibility, before I did not have a lot of knowledge.
I'd love to see more support at our college, especially in getting staff and faculty involved. It would be great to have their time and support for making Open Educational Resources (OERs) and putting universal design into action. We currently have an OER Faculty Learning Community that allows faculty to adopt OER and gives them release time to redesign their course using UDL principles. I'd love to see this program grow and incorporate the new things I've learned through this series.
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
Support from administration. Accessibility should not be optional. No excuses! Make training a requirement. Make it easy to participate, but promote action rather than just familiarity. Include in professional development. Establish train-the-trainer opportunities.
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
Have patience. There are those who will enthusiastically embrace accessibility to promote student success. More, however, will consider it a "chore" that they are afraid to attempt and would rather respond to a problem than proactively create solid accessible learning experiences. Turn those who embrace the process into advocates so that they can share their experiences with their colleagues. Patience.
* I would like there to be more focus on accessibility at my college. I would like to see administration invest in training teaching faculty in accessiblity practices in online education.
* I am committed to finding, promoting, and participating in continuing educaiton topics focused on accessiblity. I plan to make accessibility a key issue in the new OER Task Force that I am founding at my college.
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
My request:
More faculty buy-in on focus on accessability. So many of our own colleagues, students, and community members have hidden disablities and being accessiable without them having to ask can remove some of their burden. As well as just being better for all!
What I can give:
Be a sounding board. A colleague on the journey. A cheerleader for this work.
1. I'd like to have more interactions with our accessibility department or people who have disabilities so I can understand more of the "Why" certain components of accessibility are necessary especially when it comes to things like assistive technologies. I've learned a lot more about what to do to make something accessible, but I haven't had much experience seeing the end users use what I've made accessible.
2. I want to find more opporunities to learn more about what our department and what our college is doing in regards to accessibility and OER. I also want to find more opportunities to share what we're doing and brainstorm with other colleges on how we can improve.
Request: networking and research
Offer: experience in publishing open peer reviewed OER
What is a request that you have for continuing your accessibility journey? You can dream big!
What is something that you feel you can offer to the members of our community from this series?
My request is please don't use AI or other "automatic image describers" to create alt-txt for images. I can offer lived experience of actually using accessibility features to give valuable feedback to my colleagues.
My request/hope is for our institution (well, really all institutions) to fully integrate accessibility best practices into all aspects of the college. I think this will require better understanding and support from upper administration. For me, part of this involves working to better incorporate a variety of accessibility practices and OER into the first-year program and writing center (which I direct).
In terms of what I can offer - I certainly do not have much expertise in these areas or any tangible resources, but for folks who are particularly interested in what this work might look like for writing centers, I would love to continue the conversation!
My request would be for accessibility tools and initiaves to be more customer/user friendly. There are too many legalities that act as barriers in place that discourage students from accessing what they need. The burden placed on them has too much potential to hinder their progress.
A friendly reminder to reach out to your institution's librarians for help finding information. Even if they don't provide a service or have accessibility expertise, they can find who does and get you in touch.
In an ever-evolving technological landscape, I believe I need to engage in regular training sessions to consistently update my understanding of accessibility. Relying solely on instructional designers and accessibility specialists isn't sufficient to guarantee accessibility in course materials. It's imperative for faculty to undergo training and be mandated to create accessible course materials.
We are happy to offer insights into our Open Educational Resources (OER) implementation plan.
Request: I'd like access to 10-15 minute mini sessions, like "Did You Know..." and follow with a quick tip.
Offer: Since I post on our college's social media accounts, I can make sure the graphics and text are accessible.