READ THE ENTIRE OCTOBER 2022 EDITION OF INSIDE EQUAL ACCESS
This article originally appeared in the October 2022 edition of Inside Equal Access.
By: Haifa Alsaab
Professor Amy Grincewicz joined 麻豆视频最新最全 faculty 9 years ago and she now has been the Director of Instructional Design 鈥 Ambassador Crawford College of Business and Entrepreneurship (ACCBE) - for two years.
Dr. Grincewicz supervises the Instructional Support Team that gives faculty the support they need to create an innovative business curriculum and ensure high teaching quality. She also supports faculty professional development by creating trainings on learning design, best practices in pedagogy, and online course design.
Digital accessibility is at the heart of Dr. Grincewicz鈥 responsibilities. 鈥淎n essential component of creating a quality online learning experience is ensuring that all students have equal opportunities to succeed鈥 she explained. Her team efforts include reducing learning barriers by ensuring accessible learning materials for students鈥 needs. She adds accessibility features to improve readability, such as including alternate text descriptions into images, adding styles/headings to documents, and making PDFs selectable and searchable.
鈥淥ur commitment to digital accessibility supports the University鈥檚 top priority of Students First and ACCBE鈥檚 mission of offering innovative education by seeking Quality Matters course and program certifications鈥 Dr. Grincewicz added.
Dr. Grincewicz鈥檚 interest in the area of disability came from her desire to help her students to access her class content. During one of her genetics lectures, she pointed to an image on a slide and said to the students: 鈥渁s you can see on the slide鈥. She noticed a student with visual impairments, and she realized that student couldn鈥檛 see what she was referring to. From that moment, Dr. Grincewicz changed her teaching and started researching strategies to apply the principles of Universal Design for Learning to science education.
Information processing disabilities are personal to Amy, since she herself used to struggle as a student. 鈥淒uring grade school, I struggled with reading comprehension and saw a speech therapist鈥 she said. She was determined to be successful in school, but she found traditional teaching approaches useless for her.
鈥淥UR COMMITMENT TO DIGITAL ACCESSIBILITY SUPPORTS THE UNIVERSITY鈥橲 TOP PRIORITY OF STUDENTS FIRST AND ACCBE鈥橲 MISSION OF OFFERING INNOVATIVE EDUCATION BY SEEKING QUALITY MATTERS COURSE AND PROGRAM CERTIFICATIONS鈥
She then eventually found the learning strategies that worked for her, but her struggle with reading continues. 鈥淪ince I learned differently, I taught differently. When I was a graduate teaching assistant, I would have several students with learning disabilities attend my sections as my approach to teaching worked for them鈥 she said.
During her master鈥檚 degree, she discussed her academic performance with her advisor, and he encouraged her to reach out to the Office of Disability Services to seek testing for a learning disability. They tested her and she was diagnosed with Mixed Receptive Expressive Language Disorder. The counselors reviewed the accommodations she could receive. However, she thought that they don鈥檛 apply anymore in her case as she figured them out years ago. 鈥淚 had high grades so there didn鈥檛 seem to be a need for testing for a 鈥渉idden鈥 disability, but I did struggle. Students shouldn鈥檛 have to struggle like I did/do鈥 Dr. Grincewicz asserted.
In her days off, Dr. Grincewicz enjoys an Isagenix Shake and brew a cup of Midnight Sun (Red Cedar Coffee) from freshly ground beans. She then likes to hike on the trail followed by a relaxing lunch with a pint conversation. Ending the day with loved ones a trip to a brewery or the speakeasy.
Dr. Grincewicz thinks that the biggest challenge she faces in her efforts to improve accessibility is time. 鈥淎CCBE online courses utilize narrated presentations, and it takes time to make the slides and transcripts (note pages from PowerPoint) accessible as each slide need to have an alt tag鈥 many slides contain images, graphs, code, etc. that are not explained in the transcript and thus need extensive alt tags鈥 she explained.
When asked to give advice to someone just beginning to learn about accessibility, Dr. Grincewicz remembered a statement said by a former colleague of hers: 鈥渁ccessibility is a marathon not a sprint.鈥 She recommends taking courses on creating accessible materials, like the ones offered in the here at 麻豆视频最新最全. Above all else, keep learning and asking questions.