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Accessibility Services

Hours

Please refer to the ATC Hours.

The Office of Accessibility Services

Unistructure, M34
401-232-6830

The Office of Accessibility Services (OAS) strives to provide wholistic support for our students with disabilities and educate the campus community about disability through information sharing and purposeful dialogue.

STAFF

Marie Saddlemire, Ph.D.

Director, Accessibility Services
401-232-6532

Deb Arenberg

Program Administrator, Academic Testing Center
401-232-6851

Jay Caliri

Student Accessibility Specialist
401-232-6853

The Office of Accessibility Services staff will review and approve disability-related accommodations, make referrals to other campus resource persons, and provide learning specialist services. OAS also operates our Academic Testing Center (ATC). The Center, located in M34 of the Unistructure, has a large, distraction-reduced room with privacy carrels, individual testing space, lockers for secure storage of personal items, a waiting area, and an accessible bathroom.

Disability is a form of diversity and respect for the differences among our students, faculty, and staff is woven into the Bryant University mission. Accommodation provides equal access to course material, physical spaces, campus events, and more. Bryant University adheres to Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and the ADA Amendments Act of 2008. Staff in the Office of Accessibility Services (OAS) recognize that providing access is only the first step in fostering inclusion and belonging. OAS strives to provide wholistic support for our students with disabilities and educate the campus community about disability through information sharing and purposeful dialogue.

A diagnosis that qualifies as a disability under the law does not prescribe how someone identifies themselves. Know that the Office of Accessibility Services uses the word disability in the legal sense and as a starting point. Students are encouraged to share thoughts and preferences with our staff about the language they use to express their identities.

Students may reflect on the following questions as they decide whether to request accommodations:

  1. Have you been diagnosed with a physical, psychiatric, or neurodevelopmental disability or disorder?
  2. Did you have an IEP/504 or similar success plan in high school? Were accommodations approved for your use while enrolled at another college or university?
  3. Does your disability impact daily functioning in the University environment, either chronically or episodically?

  1. When requesting accommodations for the first-time at Bryant University, the student will begin by completing the online application through the ClockWork portal, which can be accessed from the Quick Launch menu on the Bryant portal home page (my.bryant.edu). The student will only complete this application once during their enrollment at Bryant. Please note that students who are accepted into the University for the following semester will not have access to the portal until they commit to Bryant and make their initial deposit.
  2. A staff person from the Office of Accessibility Services will contact the student to schedule an intake appointment after the Intake Application is submitted. Conversation during intake, combined with relevant documentation, will assist OAS staff to identify and approve the most appropriate accommodations.
  3. Accommodations are approved for one semester only. The student must request accommodations for each term, including winter or summer sessions. Without the student’s request, the Office of Accommodation Services is unable to notify your new professors. Questions about registration should be directed to accessibilitysvcs@bryant.edu

 

All students must upload documentation from a qualified medical professional that includes (1) diagnosis(es), (2) how the diagnosis(es) impacts daily functioning in the university setting and (3) accommodations recommended by the provider. The OAS staff will accept documentation such as a letter from a qualified provider, neuropsychological evaluation results, and a recent Individual Education Program (IEP) or 504 plan. Students’ files are reviewed on a case-by-case basis, and the documentation needed may vary.

Ask our staff about the PAWS (Promoting Access, Wellness, and Success) Mentoring Program and the Delta Alpha Pi (DAPi) Honor Society for students with disabilities! Through these programs, students support one another and educate the campus community about disability.