Accessibility & Disability Abroad
Off-campus study opportunities exist for all Colorado College students, no matter your major, age, gender, orientation, financial ability, or disability. The key to a successful experience for students with disabilities lies in careful planning with CC's Center for Global Education & Field Study, your partner program or host university abroad (if applicable), and the Office of Accessibility Resources. We work together to assist students in obtaining reasonable accommodations, where possible, but it is important to be aware of cultural differences that can affect the provision of accommodations.
Thinking about participating in a CC course taught abroad? Or a CC off-campus course taught in the U.S. or one with a field study component?
It's important to communicate early with faculty about arrangements for accommodations and to address other concerns you may have. Ask about essential course requirements and what you can expect in terms of travel, lodging, physical activity, etc.
How about an international exchange program?
It's important to consult with program coordinators and to consider cultural differences that can affect access during an international experience.
Our goal is to support students with disabilities and faculty in managing access for off-campus study. Please let us know how we can help!
Tips and Guidance for Making Off-Campus Study Possible
Mobility International (MIUSA) offers an extensive resource library containing supports for many specific questions and considerations related to disability and accessibility abroad, including Tip Sheets, personal stories, best practices, journals and books, podcasts, and videos and webinars. You can filter resources by specific disability on the Americans Going Abroad page.
- Medications: Tips for Traveling Internationall (MIUSA tip sheet)
International SOS is a medical and travel assistance program available to all CC students and CC employees studying or traveling outside the U.S. on a College-sponsored or approved trip.
Before you depart/planning process: International SOS offers personalized pre-departure phone consultations with a nurse to address any medical/care provider needs, medication questions, and assistance requests that you have. Please call International SOS at 215-942-8478 to ask any questions you have. Identify yourself as a CC student and give the membership number 11BSGC000027 if they ask.
While you are overseas: International SOS alarm centers are open to help you 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Staffed by doctors and nurses, multilingual coordinators, security experts, and air and ground logistics personnel, they can respond rapidly to any type of emergency or call for assistance.
Colorado College maintains a carefully reviewed list of approved and affiliated programs for off-campus study that should meet the academic needs of most students. This list is available from the Center for Global Education & Field Study. Please consult the Center for Global Education & Field Study if you intend to receive credit for any off-campus study plans.
The following websites also provide supplemental information that may benefit students:- National Clearinghouse of Disability and Exchange
A comprehensive, one-stop web resource on tools for people with disabilities of all types who are interested in international study, volunteering, teaching, and other exchange programs. - AccessAble.com
Offers detailed and searchable information about the access to hotels, restaurants, colleges, tourist attractions, libraries, hospitals, leisure centers, etc. - A World Awaits You: Journals of Success in International Exchange for People with Disabilities
A free online journal that includes interviews with people with disabilities who have participated in a wide range of international exchange programs. - Finding Funding for Your Study Abroad
Ideas from the National Clearinghouse of Disability and Exchange for funding your international experience and supports. - SAFETI (Safety Abroad First-Educational Travel Information) Clearinghouse
This clearinghouse compiles information on safety in study abroad. - Society for Accessible Travel and Hospitality (SATH)
SATH provides information on accessible travel worldwide, including a database and newsletter with travel contacts, stories, and other disability resources. - Students Abroad
This U.S. Department of State website is a one-stop resource for U.S. citizens of college age who are planning to study abroad. - Transitions Abroad
Provides practical tips and resource listings on alternative travel, such as volunteering, working, or socially responsible travel abroad.
Many students with a variety of disabilities have had successful off-campus study experiences. Colorado College alumna Laura Hershey wrote a book on the process, Survival Strategies for Going Abroad: A Guide for People with Disabilities, that can be checked out from the Office of Accessibility Resources.
Carolyn Belle, Colorado College alumna who studied in the Netherlands, shared the following about her experience:
"My biggest fear of going abroad was lacking travel friends because they would find my disability too much of a limiting factor in getting around-being creative and clear about what I could do helped me to find travel companions who remain good friends. Researching the transit system … helped alleviate uncertainty … Successful spending time abroad reinforced my confidence in how independent I can be, and was one of the best semesters of college."
Check out the Personal Stories section of the Mobility International USA (MIUSA) website to learn about a variety of student experiences:
- "If you had told me freshman year that I would be in Africa now, I wouldn't have believed you. … See, I'm diagnosed with 'anxiety,' and a touch of obsessive-compulsive disorder thrown in for fun."
-Stanford student, studied in Kenya
(listen to Her Story: Studying Abroad With a Mental Illness)
- "When I applied to study abroad, I wondered how I would fare in a non-English speaking country as a profoundly deaf person, but I also worried about my health and access to medication. [Yet] I would not trade these memories for anything."
-Sarah Franz, University of Michigan, studied in Italy and Costa Rica
- "I was elated to receive a letter … notifying me that I had been granted funding for a full year of study in China … just one week later I was diagnosed with Type I, insulin-dependent diabetes … With adequate preparation and support … studying abroad can indeed become a reality"
-Elise Reed, Boren Scholarship recipient, studied in China
Our goal is to support students with disabilities and faculty in managing access for off-campus study. Please let us know how we can help!
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