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DO-IT Scholar Profile: Kayla

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    SPEAKER 1: DO-IT
    Scholar Profile: Kayla.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    For more than 30
    years, the University
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    of Washington's Disabilities,
    Opportunities, Internetworking,
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    and Technology Center,
    also known as DO-IT,
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    has hosted programs to
    promote equal access
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    within challenging
    post-secondary programs
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    and careers.
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    Some projects work
    directly with students,
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    such as DO-IT Scholars.
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    This video features a
    DO-IT Scholar named Kayla.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    KAYLA BROWN: So
    my name is Kayla.
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    And I am a program coordinator
    at the DO-IT program.
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    I'm also a past Scholar.
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    I was a Scholar in 2005.
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    And right now, I work
    with students who
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    are in our Scholars Program.
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    | have a form of
    muscular dystrophy.
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    So essentially, I
    just use a wheelchair
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    because my muscles are weak.
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    And I also have panic
    attacks and anxiety
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    as my invisible disability.
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    When I was in high school, I was
    really looking for opportunities
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    to get new experiences,
    find a community,
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    build my support system.
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    I'm a first-generation
    college student,
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    so I really needed
    some outside support
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    in figuring out if it was even
    possible for me to go to college
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    because back then,
    it just seemed
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    so insurmountable to get there,
    to get to adulthood even.
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    I actually had a paraeducator,
    who knew me fairly well,
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    recommend that I apply
    to the Scholars Program.
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    And I actually applied the
    day before the deadline.
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    I just went for it.
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    I thought, why not
    apply, see what happens.
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    [VIDEO PLAYBACK] I like roller coasters.
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    And I like to go boating.
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    And like, someday I
    would love to skydive.
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    [END PLAYBACK]
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    I really enjoy hearing
    other points of view,
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    so whether it be political
    or different hobbies,
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    it's always fun to
    experience different things.
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    I think what I noticed
    right off the bat
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    when I started the
    Scholars Program was
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    that I was meeting so
    many types of people
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    with different disabilities and
    learning what a community looked
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    like in that context.
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    I hadn't met a lot of people
    with disabilities who were
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    interested in going to college.
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    And so that was
    really the first time
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    that I felt like I was being
    pushed out of my comfort zone
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    into thinking about a
    lot of challenging parts
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    and of my journey ahead.
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    Long term, I just got a lot
    of support and encouragement
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    for applying to scholarships,
    applying for internships,
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    creating a resume.
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    There are just a lot of
    things that you don't
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    realize you need support with.
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    And so I got ongoing support.
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    It doesn't just end after
    you start going to college.
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    You get support for as
    long as you need it.
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    I think that DO-IT influenced
    a lot of my decisions
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    on what I wanted to study,
    what I wanted to do as a career
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    because it allowed
    me to experience
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    all different types of fields.
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    So for example, I was able to
    network with faculty members
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    at the University of Washington
    during our Summer Study program.
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    And at the time, I was really
    interested in psychology.
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    And so I met with a
    psychology professor
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    and got to talk a
    little bit about it.
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    But I also was able to
    take workshops and get
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    exposed to other type of
    experiences in biology and STEM
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    majors and careers that I really
    didn't have interest in before,
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    like web design.
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    When I transferred from
    high school to college,
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    I realized that starting
    out at a community college
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    would be better for me instead
    of going right to a university.
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    I think for any
    student, you're kind of
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    skeptical about
    going to college.
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    Like, it seems like
    this huge deal.
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    And you're not sure if you can
    actually be successful in that.
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    And so to participate
    in a program
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    with other students who also
    have disabilities and you're
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    kind of all learning
    this together,
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    it was great because my
    confidence level just
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    skyrocketed at that point.
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    When I started
    working for DO-IT,
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    it made me realize that I had a
    passion for disability advocacy.
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    And so I realized that social
    work might be a career path
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    that I could pursue after I
    got my undergraduate degree
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    in psychology.
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    And so I went into social work.
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    And I connected it to my
    passion for working with people
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    with disabilities
    because I bring something
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    to the table that maybe
    other people don't because I
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    have a disability and
    I know what it's like.
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    And so DO-IT really does value
    the peer-to-peer mentoring
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    model, which is why I think
    I got the confidence here
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    to continue working for DO-IT.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    SPEAKER 1: To learn about
    how you can get involved,
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    or for more resources about
    supporting students with
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    disabilities,
    consult uw.edu/doit.
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    Copyright 2025,
    University of Washington.
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    Permission is granted
    to use this material
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    for non-commercial
    purposes, provided
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    the source is acknowledged.
Title:
DO-IT Scholar Profile: Kayla
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
DO-IT
Duration:
06:41

English subtitles

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