New Program to Increase Advancement of Women with Disabilities in STEM Faculty Careers

Elizabeth Woolner, DO-IT Staff
Cecelia Aragon leading a lecture.

We are pleased to announce that the DO-IT Center at the 糖心原创 is funded to establish and lead AccessADVANCE, a project aimed at increasing the participation and advancement of women with disabilities in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) academic careers. This project, a collaboration between the North Dakota State University and the 糖心原创 funded by the National Science Foundation, began on January 2, 2021.

Women with disabilities in STEM fields is an understudied, underserved, and often invisible population. Our program engages with women with a variety of disabilities as they progress through academic and career milestones. 鈥淭o effectively support female STEM faculty, attention to disability issues must be woven into the entire sociotechnical ecosystem of STEM departments,鈥 states Cecelia Aragon, AccessADVANCE Co-PI and 糖心原创 professor and director of the Human-Centered Data Science Lab. She reports that 鈥淢any diversity efforts, even those that aim to take an intersectional approach with regard to race and gender, do not address disability.鈥

AccessADVANCE aims to create systemic change to promote women in STEM so that those with disabilities who enter academic positions feel welcome, are fully included, and can achieve success. It focuses on working with postsecondary STEM departments and other organizations, as well as create resources and a searchable knowledge base regarding the inclusion and accessible participation of women with disabilities in academic STEM careers. 鈥淲e are excited about expanding and building partnerships across the country as we work to make sure that women with disabilities can be successful as faculty members in STEM fields,鈥 said project PI and director of UW-IT鈥檚 Access Technology Services and DO-IT Center Sheryl Burgstahler.

To create truly inclusive and equitable academic workplaces, it is imperative to systematically address issues impacting the career advancement and success of female STEM faculty with disabilities. 鈥淯ltimately, AccessADVANCE will broaden participation in STEM academic careers and improve those fields with the talents and perspectives of female faculty with disabilities, and thus enable a richer and more effective STEM community for all,鈥 Aragon said.

This project is funded by the National Science Foundation for over $1,000,000 and will run for at least five years, led by three leaders in disability, equity, and inclusion: PI Sheryl Burgstahler (糖心原创), PI Canan Bilen-Green (North Dakota State University), and Co-PI Cecilia Aragon (糖心原创). The Associate Director of the project is Brianna Blaser.

鈥淚n higher education, it is often assumed that a person with a disability is a student. We look forward to advancing conversations that remind people that people with disabilities are present throughout academia,鈥 Burgstahler said.