How the university communicates about people with disabilities, including accessibility practices, can create a more inclusive campus experience for many Spartans.
The use of person-first or identity-first language is an ongoing discussion in the disability community. These terms reflect bigger perspectives and conversations surrounding what disability is and how it relates to personhood.
Person-first language puts the person before the disability and describes what a person has, not who a person is. For example, phrases such as “students on the autism spectrum” or “individuals with disabilities” is an effort to move directly away from historically offensive phrasing, while affirming humanity. Person-first language is the acceptable etiquette for most circumstances.
More recently, a growing number of people within the disability community are using identity-first language. This approach puts disability first in the phrase, such as “autistic person.” For people who prefer identity-first language, it is often a point of empowerment and pride. If a person selects identity-first language, respect that decision. As always, the recommended practice is to ask individuals how they would like to be referred.
Accessible web pages and digital documents are the responsibility of every MSU community member. MSU’s Web Accessibility Policy defines the accessibility requirements for university web pages and digital content and contains resources, learning tools and training for creating accessible documents and other web and digital content.
Accordingly, use closed captioning for videos. Provide Word document versions of PDFs. Practice accessible design and include a text description for all images. Use styles and headers when preparing Word or text-heavy documents to provide clues about important information that can be helpful to individuals with learning disabilities and screen readers.
MSU Resource Center for Persons with Disabilities
MSU Web Accessibility
Americans with Disabilities Act National Network: Guidelines for Writing About People with Disabilities
Americans with Disabilities Act
Association on Higher Education and Disability
Best Colleges Conscious Language Guide: Disability
Center for Disability Rights: Disability Writing and Journalism Guidelines
Conscious Style Guide: Ability + Disability
National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance
National Center on Disability and Journalism: Disability Language Style Guide
The Conversation: Watch Your Language When Talking About Autism (2015)