Finding Space

UC Berkeley Research, Teaching, and Learning (RTL)

A podcast where UC Berkeley students, educators, and staff from the disability community tell their stories and call the campus community in on acts of advocacy and disability justice. Share your feedback: findingspace@berkeley.edu

Épisodes

  1. -1 J

    8: ADA Title II Update - Top 5 Things Instructors Can Do Now to Meet the New Requirements

    In this episode, we focus on what the updated Title II of the ADA means for higher education—and, more importantly, how faculty can get started without feeling overwhelmed. We’re joined by Anne Marie Richard, Assistant Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education and Chief Academic Technology Officer, for a grounded and practical conversation about the federal updates to Title II that go into effect in April 2026. Together, we walk through five concrete actions instructors can take now to begin aligning their courses with the new requirements—while honoring the real constraints, pressures, and care faculty and staff are already carrying. This conversation centers access and inclusion not as extra work, but as work deeply connected to our shared values and commitments. This episode reminds us: you’re not expected to do this alone. We highlight resources available to support instructors and share how to connect with our team for consultations and next steps. In this episode, we explore: What’s changing under the updated Title II requirements Five actionable ways faculty can begin now Why accessibility work is values-aligned, not just compliance-driven How institutions can support instructors through this transition Resources: Accessibility in Teaching & Learning Resource Hub Ally (Accessibility Checker in bCourses) Ally Course Accessibility Report in bCourses (tutorial video) SensusAccess (primarily alt media conversions) Digital Accessibility Program (DAP) Digital Accessibility of Library Collections Workshops, Consultations, Finding Space podcast Centering Disability in Teaching Accessible PDF Files (including STEM documents, LaTex, & handwritten notes) Accessible Documents (Microsoft Word & Google Docs) Accessible Slides (Microsoft PowerPoint & Google Slides) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Review transcripts on our show webpage. Share your feedback with us at findingspace@berkeley.edu. Finding Space is brought to you by Research Teaching, & Learning (RTL) in UC Berkeley's Division of Undergraduate Education.

    10 min
  2. 26 JANV.

    7: Pedagogy of the Pause — with Emily Nusbaum

    In this episode, core Disability Studies instructor Emily Nusbaum shares how she builds collective access into her courses—from day one. Instead of treating accommodations as individual, private transactions, Emily invites her students to co-design access practices together: shared note-taking, flexible ways to participate, an open Zoom room, and an access statement that frames support as everyone’s responsibility. Through stories from her classroom—students using wheelchairs and service animals, a learner attending from a grandparent’s apartment while caregiving, and a student who says they finally felt cared for—Emily shows how small shifts can transform the culture of a course. We talk about why slowing down isn’t a weakness, how “participation points” can reinforce ableism, and why accessibility is fundamentally relational, not just procedural. This episode offers concrete, realistic starting points for instructors who want to move beyond compliance toward a culture of collective access and disability justice in their teaching. In this episode, we explore: What collective access means in a university classroom Practices that help students feel genuinely “cared for” Rethinking participation, engagement, and assessment Using shared note-taking, open Zoom rooms, and access statements Why accessibility is a relational practice, not just a checklist Resources: Sample access statement from Emily’s syllabus Review transcripts on our show webpage. Share your feedback with us at findingspace@berkeley.edu. Finding Space is brought to you by Research Teaching, and Learning (RTL) in UC Berkeley's Division of Undergraduate Education.

    36 min
  3. 25/08/2025

    4: My Dream for Berkeley: Student Success Without Lowering Standards

    What if every student had a real chance to succeed—without lowering academic standards? In this episode of Finding Space, Professor Dan Garcia from UC Berkeley’s Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences department explores his dream for Berkeley: a university where all students can bring their authentic selves and thrive. After 20 years in the classroom, Dan began rethinking traditional grading practices—deeply inspired by the book Grading for Growth. His shift toward more equitable, student-centered approaches led to the adoption of strategies like absolute grading, flexible deadlines, and exam retakes. These changes are designed to support all students, particularly disabled and neurodivergent learners, while still emphasizing academic mastery. This conversation challenges us to imagine a more inclusive university—one where learning is continuous, failure is not final, and success is accessible. Tune in to learn: Why grading on a curve can harm equity How “A’s for All (as time and interest allow)” reframes student success Practical, flexible grading policies that support diverse learners Why universal design principles benefit all students—not just some Review transcripts on our show webpage. Share your feedback with us at findingspace@berkeley.edu. Finding Space is brought to you by Research Teaching, and Learning (RTL) in UC Berkeley's Division of Undergraduate Education.

    23 min

Notes et avis

5
sur 5
4 notes

À propos

A podcast where UC Berkeley students, educators, and staff from the disability community tell their stories and call the campus community in on acts of advocacy and disability justice. Share your feedback: findingspace@berkeley.edu