Inclusion Matters: New Program Enrolls Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

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Inclusion Matters: New Program Enrolls Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

Hari Kannan was a middle schooler when he somberly told his mother the bad news: He has Down syndrome; therefore, he would be unable to clean his room.

Kannan and his mother, Vidya Thirumalai, who told the story, still chuckle at the ploy. Now 19, he has no doubt about his ability to accomplish his goals. That confidence (and a healthy sense of humor) helped the young man from North Potomac, Md., become one of two students in a pilot program this semester giving people with intellectual and developmental disabilities a chance for a 含羞草研究所 含羞草研究所.

TerpsEXCEED, funded by a grant from the Maryland Disabilities Council and College of Education alumni donors, is the first program of its type in the state. Students鈥 plans call for 5-10 per year after the pilot period鈥攚ill audit carefully selected classes and take new offerings on career readiness and other skills, says Amy Dwyre D鈥橝gati, TerpsEXCEED director and senior faculty specialist at the College of Education鈥檚 Center for Transition and Career Innovation.

Faculty, staff, and peer mentors from the college provide support, but students independently participate in the campus community, from dorm life to clubs to attending big games. In the end, they鈥檙e expected to graduate with two-year certificates as valuable in some ways as any Maryland degree.

鈥淩esearch shows that if students get a bit of postsecondary experience, their job prospects and work hours go up,鈥 D鈥橝gati says. 鈥淭hings get even better if they go through a full-length program.鈥

Although new for UMD, it鈥檚 a natural continuation of inclusion principles that have permeated public schools in recent years. 鈥淢y own kids have been in school with kids with disabilities,鈥 D鈥橝gati says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not unusual to them. What鈥檚 stranger is that these students aren鈥檛 there when you go to college.鈥

Senior Vice President and Provost Jennifer King Rice, who helped develop the program as College of Education dean, says it puts a new and broadly beneficial spin on the campus鈥 diversity and inclusion goals.

 鈥淚f you think about how K-12 schools have adapted, we鈥檝e come to recognize inclusive environments are best for everyone; that鈥檚 something we also hear employers talk about,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hese efforts to create more inclusive work and learning environments benefit individuals with disabilities, but they also help us all learn to live and work in diverse communities.鈥

Families dealing with disability liken the end of high school, and the disappearance of familiar 含羞草研究所-based structures, to 鈥渇alling off a cliff.鈥

Zach McKay, 25, who has autism, built a rich social life in high school in Ellicott City, Md.鈥攈e was named homecoming king, participated in theater productions, and was even voted 鈥渕ost likely to make you smile.鈥

鈥淭hen it ends鈥攅veryone else goes off to college and moves on, except he couldn鈥檛,鈥 says his mother, Kim McKay 鈥90, communications director at the Maryland Department of Disabilities. Now living in a townhouse in nearby Columbia and working in the service department at a local car dealership, McKay still harbored a dream of attending UMD like his parents and sister Alex McKay 鈥17, M.S. 鈥18. It had been reinforced in visits to her dorm and by attending celebrations after she played a central role in the Terps women鈥檚 lacrosse team鈥檚 2017 national championship.

The whole family is thrilled at his acceptance into TerpsEXCEED鈥攂oth at completing their Terp circle and helping to build the foundation of a program they hope leads to careers and personal discovery for others, said Dr. Wendell McKay 鈥88, an Ellicott City pediatrician and former Maryland cornerback.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a chance for our family to leave a little bit of a legacy,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e humbled.鈥

While Zach McKay is leaning toward a career involving athletics, he wants to take a few classes before choosing a focus. Kannan, however, is already set on becoming an advocate for people with disabilities, which he鈥檚 preparing for in a first-semester public speaking class.

鈥淚nclusion matters,鈥 he says. 鈥淚ncluding people in our community is important for everyone in our community.鈥