SYRACUSE, N.Y. (NCC NEWS) – “Until everyone is included, no one is included.” This is the motto for Syracuse University’s InclusiveU program. InclusiveU provides students with intellectual and developmental disabilities a college education through an initiative from the Taishoff Center for Inclusive Education at Syracuse University.
Olivia Baist, a junior in the program, lives in a residence hall on campus.
“I live in Sadler Hall, and my roommate is Maggie,” she said. “You get to meet new people and I got a double (room), and it’s really fun.”
Living in a residence hall on campus is one of the key parts of InclusiveU that gives students the college experience. Samuel Roux, the student support coordinator for InclusiveU, said their primary focus right now is to increase the number of students living on campus.
“It would be great if we start to get that number to at least 50% of the students, if not more,” Roux said. “So, I think that’s probably one of the biggest keys to our growth right now is to continue to expand the amount of students that we had living in the residence halls.”
Students in the program take a variety of classes and declare a major. Baist’s major is studio art. She is taking a sculpture class, along with an exercise class and a seminar that teaches her how to plan for her week and eat healthy. Students take three years of classes and then participate in an internship program their fourth year. Olivia is currently preparing for her internship in the fall.
“So, we’ve asked Baist to prepare for her internship year, to dress professionally Monday through Thursday to kind of get in the habit of that,” Roux said. “Otherwise, she’ll just be wearing a t-shirt and gym shorts.”
Roux said 100% of their student interns who pursued employment after graduation were able to secure meaningful employment within six months of graduation. He said the program is intended to connect students to internships that pertain to their majors. For example, food studies majors may have an internship in food services or dining halls on campus.
InclusiveU also has the Peer-to-Peer mentorship program, which connects InclusiveU students and Syracuse University students. Students spend one-on-one time together as a way for InclusiveU students to meet more students on campus and get involved in clubs and activities. Julianne Strauss, a sophomore at Syracuse University, is a peer partner and said she enjoys working with the program.
“You don’t really know coming into college. You don’t know of students that have disabilities that come to college,” she said. “They’re students, they take classes, they go and they get a certificate after their four years here at Syracuse and I think it’s a really awesome program for them.”
The InclusiveU program was one of the first of its kind, and it has helped pave the way for other universities across the country.
“Over the last few years, it’s become very common, and we see tons of schools across the country starting programs like this or in the process of trying to start programs like ours,” Roux said. ” So, I would say that it’s really exploded over the last few years, but we are one of the few that operates kind of at the level and amount of students that we have.”
Since its start in 2002, InclusiveU has actively worked towards growing their program’s numbers.
“InclusiveU started with only two full-time staff, and now we have five full time staff,” Roux said. “We hope to keep growing in that way, and we’re gonna keep accepting around 20 to 25 students a year so we should be breaking 100 students this fall.”
This fall will be InclusiveU’s largest class to date. As they continue to grow the program, it will open the door for more students, like Baist, all across the country.