College students with disabilities face unique challenges when it comes to finding employment. They must find a way to meet specific job qualifications, navigate whether to disclose their disability, overcoming initial biases of someone’s capabilities, along with barriers to access from transportation, work equipment, flexible work schedules, interviewing, and much more. And that’s not even mentioning getting an interview in the first place.
With roughly 20percent of U.S. college students with a disability, institutions can play a significant role in bridging the employability and pay gap by working more collaboratively between the disability/accessibility services offices and career services. Often disability/accessibility offices are focused on supporting the student with on-campus accommodations, extending testing time, ensuring they can navigate campus, but what happens after the student leaves and graduates? The post-graduation outcomes for these students have the odds stacked against them. According to recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, individuals with a disability are more likely to be underemployed, unemployed, and underpaid.
Despite the fact that disability/accessibility offices are under tight budgets and strained staff, they must think beyond the student’s experience on their campus, and place a higher focus on their post-collegiate future. If they can tap into the resources available in the career services offices, students across a campus can be better supported. The same can be said for career services offices, which must do more outreach and collaboration in the disability space to support this growing population as outlined in this blog from the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE).
To help guide institutions, we’ve outlined below some key ways for these offices to work collaboratively.
In conclusion, partnerships between career services and disability services professionals can play a significant role in helping college students with disabilities develop greater self-awareness related to employment opportunities by promoting these opportunities. By working together, they can ensure that students with disabilities have access to the resources they need to succeed in their academic and career pursuits.
With Symplicity Accommodate, institutions can ensure that their campuses, whether in person or online, have equal access. Accommodate allows for disability services to communicate, in one system, across campus to help students with all aspects of a student’s success by identifying campus resources for students. Integrated with Symplicity CSM, institutions can provide a more comprehensive service to students with disabilities. For example, students with disabilities can use Symplicity Accommodate to request accommodations for career fairs and job interviews. The accommodation requests can then be seamlessly integrated into Symplicity CSM, allowing career center staff to provide tailored support to these students. Learn more about how these two systems can work together here.
For those interested in learning more about Accommodate or CSM and how your institution can utilize technology to support all students, schedule a conversation with us or email info@symplicity.com.