Pages

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Lessons for Teachers about The World's Largest Minority Group

Student art at the ocean with a girl standing with her hands on the wheelchair with a boy sitting in it. There are birds and a rainbow in the sky. In the rainbow these words are written: Nothing about us without us.
Student art featured at the
NYC DOE Inclusion Expo 
Victor Calise, Commissioner at the Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities and Haben Girma, the first deaf-blind person to graduate from Harvard Law, shared several lessons about the world's largest minority group with attendees at the NYC Department of Education's Accessibility Expo. The Expo was held at Brooklyn Law School on May 31st. 

Don't know what the largest minority group is? It is people with disabilities. They make up about one billion people world-wide.


Lesson's about the world's largest minority group


  • Innovation
    • Disability is an opportunity for innovation.
  • Accessible environments
    • People with disabilities are not disabled. The only thing that disables people is their environment. If we make the environment (physical, social, digital) accessible, we enable the person.
  • Special needs
    • When describing people with disabilities, you may want to rethink the term "special needs." We all have special needs.
  • Hold the mic
    • If a microphone is available when you are speaking, use it. Someone may need you to use it so they can hear better. Don't make them ask or stand out.
  • Employment
    • 75% of people with disabilities are jobless. Communities do a bad job of transitioning disabled youth from school to college or career.
      • Communities like New York City are getting better at addressing this need with programs such as NYC: AT WORK and Access VR. These programs help match people to jobs.
  • Overcoming disability
    • Reconsider thinking about how successful people with disabilities "overcame" their disability. Victor Calise said he would never trade in his disability. His disability is not to be overcome. Instead communities must help to remove digital, attitudinal, and physical barriers so those with disabilities can do whatever they want. 
  • Nothing about us, without us
    • Do not create, decide, build, name, make policies about something affecting disabled people without their participation and input. 
  • Don't be grateful

    • Non-disabled people should not feel grateful about not having disabilities. Haben Girma explains that this perpetuates hierarchies of us versus them. This continues the marginalization of people with disabilities.

  • Just ask
    • If you are unsure how to refer to someone's disability, ask them.

Want more?

You can watch an amateur Facebook livestream of each speaker. Unfortunately, captions are not automatic on Facebook, so the videos are not completely accessible. However, I did try to capture the sign language interpreter as I captured the videos, so there is some accessibility available. 


Victor Calise

Watch the 11-minute livestream.

Haben Girma

Part 1: 29 minutes. Haben begins at at 10:00
Part 2: 4 minutes
Part 3:  25 minutes

No comments:

Post a Comment