WEBVTT 00:00:00.936 --> 00:00:02.810 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:00:02.810 --> 00:00:05.780 NARRATOR: Providing accessible informal STEM learning. 00:00:05.780 --> 00:00:09.175 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:00:18.165 --> 00:00:19.790 CHARLOTTE MARTIN: I'm Charlotte Martin. 00:00:19.790 --> 00:00:21.830 I'm the Director of Access Initiatives 00:00:21.830 --> 00:00:25.220 at the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum in New York City. 00:00:25.220 --> 00:00:30.500 And one of my big takeaways working in access for a number 00:00:30.500 --> 00:00:35.510 of years now is not to assume what an individual can 00:00:35.510 --> 00:00:40.040 or cannot do, but rather knowing the potential barriers 00:00:40.040 --> 00:00:42.680 presented by your space or your program or the challenge 00:00:42.680 --> 00:00:45.650 you're working on, trying to mitigate those as best you can 00:00:45.650 --> 00:00:50.240 in advance, and then being prepared to offer clear options 00:00:50.240 --> 00:00:52.110 and information about those options. 00:00:52.110 --> 00:00:56.265 So having text labels, having large print available, 00:00:56.265 --> 00:00:58.640 so having large print labels that people can borrow, also 00:00:58.640 --> 00:01:01.850 having that content available online through an accessible 00:01:01.850 --> 00:01:04.099 web page that you can access through a QR code. 00:01:04.099 --> 00:01:07.065 By building those resources into the exhibition, 00:01:07.065 --> 00:01:09.440 you can still have that shared experience with the people 00:01:09.440 --> 00:01:12.980 that you came with even if some are disabled 00:01:12.980 --> 00:01:15.740 or not disabled or have different preferences for how 00:01:15.740 --> 00:01:17.150 they get that information. 00:01:17.150 --> 00:01:19.645 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:01:34.515 --> 00:01:35.140 KATY MENNE: Hi. 00:01:35.140 --> 00:01:36.400 My name is Katy Menne. 00:01:36.400 --> 00:01:39.430 I'm the Curator of Education at the North Carolina Maritime 00:01:39.430 --> 00:01:41.770 Museum at Southport. 00:01:41.770 --> 00:01:46.510 We strive every day, all day, through all platforms 00:01:46.510 --> 00:01:48.820 and on site to make sure that we are 00:01:48.820 --> 00:01:53.090 accessible for all people, all ages, all abilities. 00:01:53.090 --> 00:01:55.540 So if it's reading the exhibits and going through 00:01:55.540 --> 00:01:57.790 at your own pace, if it's scanning a QR 00:01:57.790 --> 00:02:01.810 code for a semi-guided audio tour, including American Sign 00:02:01.810 --> 00:02:05.230 Language, or if it's utilizing our Braille 00:02:05.230 --> 00:02:09.340 maps to go throughout the building, no matter what, 00:02:09.340 --> 00:02:11.740 we hope that you have an opportunity 00:02:11.740 --> 00:02:15.535 to learn, and do, and be the best version of yourself. 00:02:15.535 --> 00:02:17.916 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:02:29.575 --> 00:02:30.950 ISAAC BEAVERS: I'm Isaac Beavers. 00:02:30.950 --> 00:02:33.890 I'm with the Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind 00:02:33.890 --> 00:02:35.150 in Huntsville. 00:02:35.150 --> 00:02:41.780 In our informal STEM learning programs, 00:02:41.780 --> 00:02:47.730 we serve primarily blind and visually impaired students. 00:02:47.730 --> 00:02:52.730 We have over the last few years incorporated 00:02:52.730 --> 00:02:55.400 deaf and hard-of-hearing students. 00:02:55.400 --> 00:02:57.560 So one of the things we do is make sure 00:02:57.560 --> 00:03:03.500 that on our registrations, we ask what consumers might need, 00:03:03.500 --> 00:03:04.820 attendees might need. 00:03:04.820 --> 00:03:07.250 When we're working with blind and visually impaired, 00:03:07.250 --> 00:03:09.380 we want to make sure that we have 00:03:09.380 --> 00:03:15.200 Braille, tactile representations and models. 00:03:15.200 --> 00:03:18.770 We want to make sure that we have audio access. 00:03:18.770 --> 00:03:21.860 And when we're working with our deaf, 00:03:21.860 --> 00:03:24.080 we always make sure we have American Sign Language 00:03:24.080 --> 00:03:30.720 interpreters, and also we have a few FM devices along the way. 00:03:30.720 --> 00:03:32.220 RYAN SAGLIO: My name is Ryan Saglio. 00:03:32.220 --> 00:03:35.160 I am the Supported Employment Program Manager 00:03:35.160 --> 00:03:38.040 at a human services nonprofit in Massachusetts 00:03:38.040 --> 00:03:40.140 called Attleboro Enterprises. 00:03:40.140 --> 00:03:43.470 I work exclusively with individuals with disabilities 00:03:43.470 --> 00:03:45.870 and mental illness who are looking to find employment 00:03:45.870 --> 00:03:47.790 opportunities out in their community, 00:03:47.790 --> 00:03:51.030 but I have also in the past done accessibility and inclusion 00:03:51.030 --> 00:03:53.680 work for some of the local museums here in New England. 00:03:53.680 --> 00:03:56.730 I think that good accessibility work is basic accessibility 00:03:56.730 --> 00:03:59.880 work, things like having bathrooms that are accessible, 00:03:59.880 --> 00:04:04.590 benches that are accessible, wide walking paths. 00:04:04.590 --> 00:04:09.000 A story that I often tell of accessibility gone wrong 00:04:09.000 --> 00:04:12.840 is I recently visited a museum that I was very excited to see. 00:04:12.840 --> 00:04:14.640 I'd been waiting two years to get there. 00:04:14.640 --> 00:04:17.760 I do have my own physical disabilities 00:04:17.760 --> 00:04:20.790 and physical limitations, so I don't use mobility aids, 00:04:20.790 --> 00:04:22.920 but I do need to sit down quite often. 00:04:22.920 --> 00:04:26.010 And we were in the museum, and we were walking around, 00:04:26.010 --> 00:04:28.530 and after a couple of minutes, I really needed to sit, 00:04:28.530 --> 00:04:31.980 and because of COVID, they had removed all of the benches. 00:04:31.980 --> 00:04:34.350 So as we're walking through the museum, 00:04:34.350 --> 00:04:37.650 I'm looking for somewhere to sit down so I can take a moment, 00:04:37.650 --> 00:04:39.030 and we're not finding one. 00:04:39.030 --> 00:04:40.680 And the further we get into the museum, 00:04:40.680 --> 00:04:42.870 the less I'm looking at the museum, 00:04:42.870 --> 00:04:45.918 and the more I'm just looking for a bench. 00:04:45.918 --> 00:04:47.460 And by the time we finally found one, 00:04:47.460 --> 00:04:49.830 there was a line of people who were looking to sit down, 00:04:49.830 --> 00:04:51.908 so we actually just left. 00:04:51.908 --> 00:04:52.700 TANY HOLZWORTH: Hey. 00:04:52.700 --> 00:04:53.750 I'm Tany Holzworth. 00:04:53.750 --> 00:04:57.800 I'm the content designer for Inclusive Classroom 00:04:57.800 --> 00:05:00.920 Tools at Microsoft, and previously, I 00:05:00.920 --> 00:05:02.630 was managing the Volunteer Inclusion 00:05:02.630 --> 00:05:04.220 Program at Woodland Park Zoo. 00:05:04.220 --> 00:05:07.280 And some of the things that were the most successful with us 00:05:07.280 --> 00:05:12.320 when we first got started were revamping the Accessibility 00:05:12.320 --> 00:05:14.150 Guidelines on our website. 00:05:14.150 --> 00:05:17.720 We found that a lot of people with disabilities 00:05:17.720 --> 00:05:20.690 didn't perceive the zoo to be accessible 00:05:20.690 --> 00:05:23.570 for them to even visit, so it never occurred to them 00:05:23.570 --> 00:05:25.950 to volunteer at the zoo. 00:05:25.950 --> 00:05:28.460 So by updating the website and making sure 00:05:28.460 --> 00:05:32.480 that there was a way to request accommodations or see what 00:05:32.480 --> 00:05:34.550 accommodations are available, we were 00:05:34.550 --> 00:05:38.000 able to get a lot more folks interested in volunteering. 00:05:38.000 --> 00:05:39.800 The other thing that was really important 00:05:39.800 --> 00:05:47.090 was training staff and existing volunteers without disabilities 00:05:47.090 --> 00:05:51.500 to presume competence of the incoming volunteers. 00:05:51.500 --> 00:05:55.920 And by that, I just mean treating them 00:05:55.920 --> 00:05:59.010 as much as possible like anybody else 00:05:59.010 --> 00:06:00.975 who would be a new volunteer. 00:06:00.975 --> 00:06:03.470 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:06:15.820 --> 00:06:17.320 DIANA JOHNS: My name is Diana Johns. 00:06:17.320 --> 00:06:19.690 I'm the Vice President for Exhibits, Education, 00:06:19.690 --> 00:06:22.300 and Outreach at Pacific Science Center, 00:06:22.300 --> 00:06:28.070 and I have been with the Science Center for 17 years now. 00:06:28.070 --> 00:06:30.872 I think for an institution that's been around since 1962, 00:06:30.872 --> 00:06:32.830 some of the challenges that you're dealing with 00:06:32.830 --> 00:06:35.140 are legacy issues. 00:06:35.140 --> 00:06:39.940 So one of the best practices is when you have that opportunity 00:06:39.940 --> 00:06:46.615 to make a significant change to a legacy area, 00:06:46.615 --> 00:06:49.630 how are you thinking about the accessibility of that area? 00:06:49.630 --> 00:06:53.620 We recently put in a new experience 00:06:53.620 --> 00:06:58.180 that we'd had before, and the vendor 00:06:58.180 --> 00:07:00.490 had asked if we could put it back in the same place, 00:07:00.490 --> 00:07:06.633 and we said no because that was not accessible to everyone. 00:07:06.633 --> 00:07:08.550 CHARLOTTE MARTIN: But the thing I would really 00:07:08.550 --> 00:07:09.990 encourage from the very beginning 00:07:09.990 --> 00:07:13.680 is engaging directly with disabled self-advocates, 00:07:13.680 --> 00:07:16.470 and engage with them at all levels of your planning 00:07:16.470 --> 00:07:18.990 from the very beginning at that brainstorming to identify 00:07:18.990 --> 00:07:21.365 what the priorities should be or what the challenges are, 00:07:21.365 --> 00:07:22.560 what the opportunities are. 00:07:22.560 --> 00:07:24.172 It's the expression-- 00:07:24.172 --> 00:07:26.130 Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. 00:07:26.130 --> 00:07:27.343 We need to start somewhere. 00:07:27.343 --> 00:07:29.010 But as long as it's iterative, and we're 00:07:29.010 --> 00:07:31.020 learning along the way, that's really 00:07:31.020 --> 00:07:34.360 what's going to make the big difference. 00:07:34.360 --> 00:07:36.610 KATY MENNE: When designing programs and exhibits, 00:07:36.610 --> 00:07:40.100 we try to look at the whole person. 00:07:40.100 --> 00:07:42.530 So if you are sitting in a wheelchair, 00:07:42.530 --> 00:07:44.440 if you're sitting on the floor, if you're 00:07:44.440 --> 00:07:46.870 walking around needing constant movement, 00:07:46.870 --> 00:07:49.660 how can you still learn and interact 00:07:49.660 --> 00:07:51.430 with our maritime topics? 00:07:51.430 --> 00:07:53.830 So materials utilized in classes, 00:07:53.830 --> 00:07:56.290 like crayons or scissors, we try to have 00:07:56.290 --> 00:07:57.910 several different options. 00:07:57.910 --> 00:08:03.070 We hope that as you take on this journey of creating 00:08:03.070 --> 00:08:05.920 inclusive and accessible spaces for all people 00:08:05.920 --> 00:08:10.120 that you think about putting yourself in the shoes 00:08:10.120 --> 00:08:13.590 and in the spaces of others. 00:08:13.590 --> 00:08:16.650 ISAAC BEAVERS: As you think about how 00:08:16.650 --> 00:08:19.080 to accommodate someone who is blind or visually impaired 00:08:19.080 --> 00:08:22.260 and somebody who's deaf or hard-of-hearing, 00:08:22.260 --> 00:08:27.450 the fact of the matter is, is that almost all of us 00:08:27.450 --> 00:08:31.860 could benefit from something that is larger print, that 00:08:31.860 --> 00:08:35.850 is high contrast, almost all of us 00:08:35.850 --> 00:08:42.150 could benefit from clear communication. 00:08:42.150 --> 00:08:44.940 RYAN SAGLIO: When you make one small change with one community 00:08:44.940 --> 00:08:48.390 need in mind, it often has ramifications and can 00:08:48.390 --> 00:08:50.580 impact more than just one. 00:08:50.580 --> 00:08:52.710 So when you make a space wheelchair accessible, 00:08:52.710 --> 00:08:54.630 you make it easier for a mom with a stroller 00:08:54.630 --> 00:08:56.430 to also navigate that space. 00:08:56.430 --> 00:08:58.770 When you create a gender neutral bathroom, 00:08:58.770 --> 00:09:01.655 you create a place for dads to bring their kids or caregivers 00:09:01.655 --> 00:09:03.030 who might be out in the community 00:09:03.030 --> 00:09:07.770 and need a space that is neither a men's room or a women's room. 00:09:07.770 --> 00:09:10.410 Or when you create a picture menu for somebody 00:09:10.410 --> 00:09:12.210 that doesn't read, you also allow 00:09:12.210 --> 00:09:14.220 someone who might have extreme anxiety 00:09:14.220 --> 00:09:15.960 or might be an English language learner 00:09:15.960 --> 00:09:23.910 to also occupy that space and have the typical experience. 00:09:23.910 --> 00:09:31.800 DIANA JOHNS: When you do design something that you make sure 00:09:31.800 --> 00:09:38.160 you are testing that with a wide variety of potential users 00:09:38.160 --> 00:09:43.470 because you will learn very quickly if something 00:09:43.470 --> 00:09:48.130 is truly as close to universally designed as possible. 00:09:48.130 --> 00:09:50.250 So I think it's always never assume 00:09:50.250 --> 00:09:51.430 you've got all the answers. 00:09:51.430 --> 00:09:54.090 Make sure that you are testing things 00:09:54.090 --> 00:09:57.705 with all the variety of users that you hope to invite. 00:09:57.705 --> 00:09:59.890 [MUSIC PLAYING] 00:09:59.890 --> 00:10:01.600 NARRATOR: This presentation was created 00:10:01.600 --> 00:10:06.100 by AccessISL, which supports efforts to make informal STEM 00:10:06.100 --> 00:10:08.200 learning opportunities more welcoming 00:10:08.200 --> 00:10:11.650 and accessible to everyone, especially individuals 00:10:11.650 --> 00:10:14.810 with disabilities. 00:10:14.810 --> 00:10:18.710 For more information, visit the AccessISL website, 00:10:18.710 --> 00:10:28.730 uw.edu/doit/programs/accessisl. 00:10:28.730 --> 00:10:32.060 AccessISL is supported by National Science Foundation 00:10:32.060 --> 00:10:39.530 grant number DRL-1906147. 00:10:39.530 --> 00:10:43.010 Any questions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations 00:10:43.010 --> 00:10:45.950 expressed in this material are those of the speakers, 00:10:45.950 --> 00:10:48.050 and do not necessarily reflect the views 00:10:48.050 --> 00:10:49.790 of the federal government. 00:10:49.790 --> 00:10:55.250 Copyright 2022, University of Washington. 00:10:55.250 --> 00:10:57.560 Permission is granted to copy these materials 00:10:57.560 --> 00:11:00.200 for educational non-commercial purposes 00:11:00.200 --> 00:11:03.670 provided the source is acknowledged.