ҹɫСÊÓÆµ

Education

Education is the cornerstone of realizing the ADA’s goals of full participation, independent living, economic self-sufficiency, and equal opportunity.
Portrait of woman in wheelchair on graduation day.

ҹɫСÊÓÆµ is committed to promoting access to education from preschool through post-graduate work. We take a comprehensive approach to educational access, including advocacy, partnerships with educational institutions, and programs designed to break down barriers to education.

Access to education requires thoughtful, robust engagement in policy. ҹɫСÊÓÆµ works with a broad coalition that includes civil rights groups, educators to promote education policy that benefits students with disabilities.

30 Seconds: ҹɫСÊÓÆµâ€™s Campaign to Stop Bullying
Students with disabilities are bullied and harassed at a much higher rate than their peers. A recent study by the National Center for Education Statistics indicates that, in reality, up to 85 percent of students with disabilities experience bullying. Students cannot be expected to learn in an environment of fear. To promote access to educational opportunity, ҹɫСÊÓÆµ works to make schools safer places for students.
Seclusion and Restraint
Students with disabilities are disproportionately subjected to harsh and often dangerous physical restraint and seclusion in their schools. Schools must do everything possible to ensure that restraint is not used, except in cases when the student poses a threat to his/herself or others.
Principles for School Safety, Privacy, and Equity

ҹɫСÊÓÆµ and 39 other education, privacy, disability rights, and civil rights organizations released ten principles to protect all students’ safety, privacy, and right to an equal education. The principles are meant to serve as a starting point for conversations with policymakers and school officials about how to keep students safe while respecting their dignity and encouraging their individual growth.

NBCUniversal Tony Coelho Media Scholarship
ҹɫСÊÓÆµ seeks to make higher education affordable for all individuals with disabilities. ҹɫСÊÓÆµ is working with NBCUniversal to promote access to higher education by helping to eliminate the funding barriers people with disabilities face when seeking higher education.
Other Scholarships

  • The Hamilton Relay Scholarship supports high school students who are deaf, hard of hearing, deaf-blind, or have difficulty speaking with a $500 college scholarship.

  • The Quell Foundation offers scholarships to students who have experienced the loss of a loved one to suicide, to students diagnosed with mental health conditions, and students pursuing a degree in psychology, social work, or other fields of study related to the provision of mental health services.

  • disABLEDperson, Inc. runs a $2,000 National Scholarship Competition for college students with disabilities.
  • – Affordable Colleges Online
  • – Community for Accredited Online Schools
  • – Going Merry makes it easy for current and aspiring college students to apply directly for scholarships and save money on tuition.
  • – NurseJournal.org compiled the following free list of nursing scholarships and funding opportunities for both high school and undergraduate students with disabilities.
Higher Education
Access to higher education is crucial to succeeding in most sectors of the 21st-century workforce. College, graduate school, and professional schools not only prepare students for the workforce, they are the setting in which many young people transition to adult life. Although unprecedented numbers of students with disabilities now pursue college and graduate school, students with disabilities still face barriers to education. As the nation’s largest cross-disability membership organization, ҹɫСÊÓÆµ is committed to increasing the success of students in higher education.