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How Students with Disabilities Can Prepare for College The following link(s) will open in one new tab or window. Should you have any questions regarding this article, please follow the specific contact information provided. Here’s three links to help students prepare for college from the DO-IT (Disabilities, Opportunities, Internetworking, and Technology) Program at the University of Washington.
The following publication addresses issues surrounding the transitions from high school to college and beyond for people with disabilities.
www.washington.edu/doit/Brochures/Academics/college.html Preparing for College: An Online Tutorial
College Survival Skills: Tips for Students with Disabilities to Increase College Success Parents' Guide to Transition of Their Adult Child to College, Career & Community The following link, from the Heath Resource Center at George Washington University, has tools for parents to prepare them for their child's transition from public school to postsecondary education and adulthood. This guide includes information about laws that protect parents' rights as well as the rights of adult children in college. To view this guide visit: www.heath.gwu.edu For more information on preparing for Post- Secondary Education go to: www.disability.gov
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September 2010 Contact Us
Phone: 1-800-395-3372 Upcoming DDPC Meetings September 2010: 9/23/10 - Executive Committee Meeting *Notice* Open Government and the New York State Developmental Disabilities Planning Council (DDPC). All DDPC meetings are held in Albany, NY unless otherwise noted. Under law, the New York State Developmental Disabilities Planning Council (DDPC) meetings and DDPC Standing Committee meetings are open meetings. If the public wants to attend, they can attend as observers. Participants may be asked to leave during breaks in the deliberations and when the meeting goes into executive session. If more information, please contact the DDPC directly. People First Language The DDPC strictly adheres to and encourages the use of people first language. However you may note that in some articles/stories appearing in the E-Bulletin the language used is not always entirely people first. Articles submitted to the DDPC are taken verbatim from the source and are therefore not edited by the DDPC for correct people first language due to copyright restrictions. |
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