Solutions Marketing Group

Providing clients with innovative strategies that position them to understand, penetrate and retain the disability market.

  • Home
  • About
  • What We Do
  • Blog
  • Learn From Us
    • Boot Camp
    • eBook
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
  • What We Do
  • Blog
  • Learn From Us
    • Boot Camp
    • eBook
  • Contact

School of Thought and Deed: CUNY Disability Stuides Program

July 1, 2013

By Joan Leotta

CUNY School of Professional StudiesUniversities are in the business of transforming lives through ideas. City University New York (CUNY) has taken that vocation one step further. CUNY, an institution of 23 campuses spread over the NYC metro area with more than 250,000 students, wants to transform attitudes about people with disabilities. At the same time, a particular CUNY program has very concrete aims: to educate the frontline workforce and create career opportunities for people with disabilities and those who serve them.

The vehicle for both transformations is the Disabilities Studies Program, offered by CUNY’S School of Professional Studies (SPS). In 2013 CUNY SPS will offer the nation’s first online master’s degree program in disability studies, along with existing Online Bachelor’s Degree and a Graduate Certificate programs in the same discipline. The program is designed to offer and opportunity to explore the relationship between society and disability to help students gain a broader view of the issues they encounter on a daily basis.

The program combines multidisciplinary perspectives on disability with coursework designed to spark innovation. Graduates of the program have the potential to develop new policies and new approaches to disability barriers. Program participants develop tools to help transform obstacles into stepping stones, taking people with disabilities to higher levels of achievement.

How the Program Began

The online master’s degree program has its roots in the activism of a presidential family. Mariette Bates, Academic Director of Disabilities Studies, explains: “Twenty-four years ago … John F. Kennedy, Jr. was challenged to do something positive in the disability field here in the city. In 1989, after researching needs in the field, he decided to focus on the needs of the frontline workforce.  He worked with Bill Ebenstein, now CUNY’s University Dean for Health and Human Services, to develop  courses on  CUNY campuses for those target workers serving individuals with disabilities.

Mariette Bates, Academic Director of the CUNY Disabilities Studies program, teaches a class

Mariette Bates, Academic Director of the CUNY Disabilities Studies program, teaches a class.

“The idea was to strengthen the primary relationships workers have with those they serve,” Bates continues, “and to broaden the background knowledge of those already in the field, increasing their chance to rise into management. At the time we began there were no particular programs targeted to workers serving people with disabilities, using a person-centered perspective.”

Kennedy also created a fellowship for CUNY students who work in the field. Kennedy Fellows receive a scholarship and mentoring opportunities. In the past two decades the program has selected over 800 students to become Kennedy Fellows.Bates taught a course on Introduction to Developmental Disabilities in the early days of the program and served as a mentor to Kennedy Fellows.

In 2003, CUNY created the School of Professional Studies to further the education of working adults in New York City. The Disability Studies Program began at the newly created school with a graduate certificate in 2004. The Master’s Degree began as a face-to-face program in 2009.

Says Bates, “Our programs are aimed not only at getting people in the trenches to think bigger thoughts about disability and society, but also to provide a way for those in the field to do more, kick-starting their creativity. Our classes provide forums in which people can put together their practical knowledge and the newly-minted theoretical immersion to find new practical solutions to removing barriers to people with disabilities.”

Who Take the Classes

In 2012, CUNY SPS created the Online Bachelor’s Degree program for people who need to finish college. The Master’s Degree is coming online in the fall of 2013. Online courses provide flexibility to students who self-identify as having a disability and therefore might be better able to complete the courses in the comfort of their own homes and with their own adaptive computer equipment. In addition, workers who cannot attend school face-to-face because of family responsibilities have another option to finish their degree.

Another benefit to presenting the classes online is the opportunity to broaden the student base geographically. Although most of the students still come from the metro New York area, as the program becomes better known, its reach can grow. Bates adds, “Online students have the advantage of paying in-state tuition no matter where they live.”

Two students interact with Mariette via Skye

Two students interact with Mariette via Skye

Katie DeFoe, Assistant Director of the program, reports, “Of course the number of students and the ratio of those with disabilities changes each semester, but in general, there are about 90-100 students in the masters program and about 15-20 now in the Graduate Certificate program. The Bachelor’s Degree Program has about thirty enrolled and we get more and more applications each day.”

Because the program had such strong ties to service agencies, about 75% of the students in the MASTER’S DEGREE program already work in the field in some capacity. About 15% of  the disability studies  students self-identify as having disability.

Bates points out that the specialty of disability expertise is a relatively new one and not everyone understands what can be gained by taking it. She says, “With these resources and qualifications under their belt,” she explains, “now people with disabilities can become advocates not only for themselves, but also can have an opportunity to be in positions that will affect disability policy.”

The Bachelor’s Degree, Master’s Degree and Graduate Certificate programs are open to all who meet certain educational requirements, described below.  The Kennedy Fellows program is administered by the Office of the Dean of Health and Human Services and has specific requirements for applicants. Limited scholarship aid is available at all levels for qualifying students.

Teaching and Placement

By offering classes online, the programs (can) attract an eclectic mix of instructors with various real-world viewpoints. Faculty members include both various full-time CUNY professors and expert practitioners from the field. DeFoe says, “About 58% of our current faculty either have disabilities or are parents of or have siblings with disabilities.”

People from other CUNY disciplines such as the School of Social Work or the rehabilitation fields  often come to the program to learn more about disability in the four course advanced certificate program with a goal of transforming perspectives in their fields.

The Future

The program should leave a lasting legacy to improve the working lives of people with disabilities. “One of the things I value about these programs,” says Bates, “is that they have the power to transfer that knowledge and energy to future generations.

“These programs offer people with disabilities and those who support them an opportunity to dialogue face to face and online,” she continues. “Each class provides a safe place to explore issues related to disability and have some profound dialogue and that will transform the field—and remove the stigmas that lead to poverty. These things are really important.”

CUNY SPS Disability Studies at a Glance

Disability Studies is an emerging academic field that explores disability from multiple perspectives, including the social sciences, humanities, science, and the law. SPS offers groundbreaking, fully accredited programs within Disability Studies including:

Online B.A. in Disability Studies (120 credits)

  • The first undergraduate degree program of its kind in the country
  • Earn the necessary skills to improve the lives of people with disabilities
  • Elect one of the four concentrations for in-depth study: Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities; Autism Spectrum Disorder; Mental/Behavioral Health; Interdisciplinary Disability Studies

M.A. in Disability Studies (30 credits) Online courses available

  • The first stand-alone program of its kind in the country
  • Use a “person-centered” approach to the study of disability to uncover a new understanding of society
  • Gain intellectual and methodological tools to assume greater responsibility and leadership roles in the future as service providers, advocates, researchers, or policy makers

Graduate Certificate in Disability Studies (12 credits) Online courses available

  • Examine disability through psychology, history, literature, law, medicine, politics, and urban planning
  • Acquire a deeper understanding of disability studies, including its philosophy, importance in disability research, influence on public policy and impact on service delivery
  • Further or begin a career working with and for people with a wide range of disabilities in community-based and governmental agencies as they evolve in the 21st Century

Contacts
http://sps.cuny.edu/programs/ba_disabilitystudies BA
http://sps.cuny.edu/programs/gradcert_disabilitystudies Certificate
http://sps.cuny.edu/programs/ma_disabilitystudies Master
kathleen.defoe@mail.cuny.edu
mariette.bates@mail.cuny.edu

 

Edited by Mary-Louise Piner.

Filed Under: Profiles in Excellence Leave a Comment

Tags: CUNY, disability studies, education, Mariette Bates

find this post helpful? Try these:

No related posts.

share

Welcome

Whether you are interested in breaking ground in the market as a company, you are living with disability or love someone who is, we’re committed to keeping you abreast of what matters to people with disabilities—and why—so stay with us.

SIGN UP

Get the latest SMG updates in your inbox!


Categories

  • Featured
  • General
  • Notes from the Founder
  • Profiles in Excellence
  • SMG Tip
  • Video

Archives

  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • May 2019
  • January 2019
  • November 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • May 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • July 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • October 2014
  • July 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • March 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • July 2012
  • April 2012
  • December 2011
  • October 2011
  • August 2011
  • April 2011
  • February 2011

Contact Us

Quick Facts

The disability market consists of 56M people, representing an annual disposable income of $544 billion.

The disability market is more than twice as large as the tween market (20M), and has almost 3X the disposable spending power ($180B).

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, of the 69.6 million families in the U.S., 20.3 million families have at least one member with a disability.

A University of Massachusetts Boston survey found 92% of consumers felt favorably toward companies hiring people with disabilities; 87% prefer to do business with such companies.

By the year 2030, 71.5 million Baby Boomers will be over the age of 65 and demanding products, services, and environments that address their age-related physical changes.

Featured Clients

Darden Restaurants
American Express
AT&T
Sodexo
Bank of America
Wellcare
BlueCross BlueShield
ESPN
Zappos
Nike
Hilton
Get the latest SMG updates in your inbox!

678-805-7091 | info@disability-marketing.com

© 2025 Solutions Marketing Group

| a doodle dog creative website and brand