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Disability Studies and Action Collaborative

Disability Culture, Scholarship, and Community

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Search Results for: 2022

Coursework in Critical Disability Studies

About the Program & Minor
Upcoming classes
All Coursework, by field
Archive by Quarter
What courses are available next quarter?

This page documents our current and upcoming coursework in Disability Studies!  We hope that you are excited to develop, teach, and/or enroll in them as well.  We also have a list of courses across the disciplines that could contribute to our new Minor in Critical Disability Studies as electives or topics courses. At the end of this page, we include an archive of recently offered courses and their descriptions.

Have we missed one? Please use this form to let us know about new courses in your unit relevant to Critical Disability Studies so that we can add them to our growing list!

The Critical Disability Studies Program & Minor

The disability studies academic program and DISA course prefix launched in AY 2022-23, and our Minor officially launched in 2023-24! Learn how to declare a Minor in Critical Disability Studies today! Read more about the academic program and its mission here and find us in the WWU course catalogue!

I want to add a Minor in CDS!

When will DISA coursework on [topic] be available?

Developing new curriculum and coursework is a gradual process.  Over the next several years, expect a number of new courses to be added to our growing list below.  Many new classes begin as experimental courses (numbered X97 in the course catalogue), which will then be transitioned to formally numbered DISA courses as the DS Minor and the new Institute for Critical Disability Studies grows. You can find more of your questions answered in the CDS Minor page’s FAQ section.


Our Core DISA courses for the Minor in Critical Disability Studies

  • DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (BCGM GUR)
  • DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies
  • DISA 450 – Capstone in Critical Disability Studies

DISA Courses Next Quarter

Learn more about the ICDS’s Critical Disability Studies program’s DISA offerings and other courses that could serve as electives for the Minor. Every academic year, we aim to offer 4-6 sections of DISA 330, 2-5 sections of DISA 350, and at least one section of DISA 450.

Have questions about a class you are planning to take? Email icds@wwu.edu.

Winter 2026

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF, OL, multiple sections)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kyann Flint, Daman Wandke
    • Section details: FTF TTh 2-4pm CRN 12435, and remote asynchronous, CRN 13010
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies: Disability & Access in the Sciences (3Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Disability and Access in STEM and the Academic Institution
    • Description: 3 Credits
    • Instruction: GIM (G McGrew)
    • Section details: Thursdays, 2 – 4:30 pm, CRN 12434
    • This course can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 450 – Capstone in Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 450: Capstone in Critical Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits
    • Instruction: Kathleen Brian
    • Section details: MW, 3 – 5:30 pm, CRN 13585
    • This course counts as the final of the three Core Classes for the Minor

Spring 2026

NEW! DISA 201 – Stories of Disability in the World – HUM GUR – (4 Cr, multiple sections)
  • DISA 201: Stories of Disability in the World – GUR
    • Description: 4 Credits. HUM GUR. This course focuses on personal experiences of disability, the body, and community engagement. Students will learn how disability is a complex social experience that goes far beyond medical conceptions of illness and health, ability and disability. Through the lens of personal storytelling, students will examine the role that disability plays in the world, including such concepts as ableism, accessibility, and disabled joy.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: Face-to-face & Online Synchronous
    • This course can serve as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Ezra Tilland-Stafford
    • Section details: FTF TTh 2-4pm CRN 22376
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies (multiple sections)
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Ableism in Healthcare
    • Description: 5 Credits
      • This course explores ableism in the healthcare system. Students will learn about several central topics, including the spectrum of disability, barriers to equitable healthcare, misconceptions driven by medical professionals, the cultural criticism of popular media, patient and family-centered care, and the principles of universal design in medical spaces. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major; though the course examines healthcare, it will be geared toward anyone planning to pursue a career working with people.
    • Instruction: Kyann Flint
    • Section details: FTF, TTh 10:00 – 12:00 CRN 22375
    • This course can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Disability & Law
    • Description: 5 Credit
      • This class explores the interactions of disability and the law. We will delve into the legal foundations, policies and laws that serve to ensure equality under the U.S. Constitution. Some of the topics include employment and public accommodations under the ADA, special education rights (IDEA), guardianship, substitute decision making, conditions of confinement and others.  Students will read some case law, policies, and articles related to the topic, including current issues.  
    • Instruction: Ceci Lopez
    • Section details: FTF, TTh 9:00 – 11:20 am CRN 22910
    • This course is crosslisted with FAIR 319B, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Electives

  • Additional Critical Disability Studies Minor Electives at Western:
    • ASLC 101 – Elementary ASL & Culture
    • ASLC 102 – Elementary ASL/II
    • ASLC 103 – Elementary ASL/III
    • COMM 260 – Communication, Identity and Difference
    • CSCI 444 – Accessible Computing
    • DIAD 205 – Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media
    • HSP 443 – Disability: Individuals and Systems
    • SPED 310 – Disability & Intersectional Equity in K-12 Schools – Please contact your Disability Studies Minor advisor to have it approved manually

Coursework in Disability Studies: Current & In-Development

The list below is divided into DISA courses, new courses that are available or have recently been offered, and a list of courses that are in development and have not yet been made available on the course catalogue. You can now add a Minor or Interest in Critical Disability Studies!

  • XY01 – Critical Disability Studies Minor
  • XYIN – Critical Disability Studies Interest

DISA Courses in Critical Disability Studies:

Core Minor Courses

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies – BCGM GUR
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke, Kristen Chmielewski, Andrew Lucchesi, Kyann Flint
    • Section details: Varies: Asynchronous online; Face-to-face
    • Next offering(s): At least one section every quarter
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS
    • Description: 3 – 5 Credits. This series of courses makes a deep dive into specific divisional topics centering critical disability studies. If DISA 330 is our core course that covers the general overview of theory and core principles of critical disability studies, DISA 350 is the application of these to a wide variety of interdisciplinary areas, whether it’s Dance, Leadership, Science, or Business. It can be taken once as a Core requirement to our Minor, or can be repeated once with a different instructor to serve as an Elective.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke, Andrew Lucchesi, Pam Kuntz, Cathy McDonald, G McGrew
    • Section details: Varies: Asynchronous online; Face-to-face
    • Next offering(s): At least two sections every year
    • This can serve as a Core Class and potential Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 450 – Capstone in Critical Disability Studies

Other DISA Courses

NEW in Sp 2026! DISA 201 – Stories of Disability in the World – HUM GUR
  • DISA 201: Stories of Disability in the World – GUR
    • Description: 4 Credits. HUM GUR. This course focuses on personal experiences of disability, the body, and community engagement. Students will learn how disability is a complex social experience that goes far beyond medical conceptions of illness and health, ability and disability. Through the lens of personal storytelling, students will examine the role that disability plays in the world, including such concepts as ableism, accessibility, and disabled joy.
    • Instruction: TBD
    • Section details: Face-to-face & Online
    • Previous offerings: NEW
    • Next offering(s): Approx. 1-3 each year (funding permitting)
    • This course could serve as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 397 – Critical Disability Studies (see DISA 330)

This was the experimental course number for what is now DISA 330. It was offered once during Spring 2023.

  • DISA 397: Critical Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kristen Chmielewski
    • Section details: face-to-face
    • Previous offerings: Spring 2023 TR 10:00 – 11:50 am, CRN 24011
    • Next offering(s): N/A. This course is now offered as DISA 330.

Courses in Disability Studies throughout Western:

American Sign Language and Culture (ASLC*)

*Previously offered as EXCE courses

ASLC 101 (Prev. EXCE 101) – Elementary ASL/Culture (ACGM GUR)
  • Elementary ASL/Culture
    • Description: 5 Credits. ACGM GUR. This course provides practice in ASL conversational skills, regarding learning and giving signs as well as receiving signs and basic signs for everyday living. In addition, this course focuses upon worldwide deaf culture, historical aspects of deafness and the development of a variety of supports for the deaf community, especially in developing countries. ASL is the primary sign language used in North America, West Africa, and Southeast Asia. The course also provides for exploration of other systems of sign communication used internationally.
    • Instruction: Linda Boyd
    • Section offerings: Face-to-face
ASLC 102 (Prev. EXCE 102) – Elementary ASL II

ASLC 103 (Prev. EXCE 103) – Elementary ASL III

*Note: A maximum of one ASLC 10X courses can count as an elective for the Minor.

Computer Science (CSCI)

CSCI 444 (Prev. CSCI 497T / 597T) – Accessible Computing
  • Accessible Computing
    • Title: Accessible Computing (graduate & undergraduate)
    • Description: 4 Credits
      • This project-based course introduces software accessibility principles. Students will learn how to design and build software for users with different abilities, e.g., people with visual impairments. Topics include:
        1. Interaction design for users with different abilities
        2. Ethics and human subject research
        3. Accessibility testing and evaluation techniques
        4. Open-source assistive technologies
        5. Machine learning for accessible computing
        6. Software engineering tools for accessible computing
        7. Mobile accessibility
        8. Wearable devices for people with disabilities
      • Prerequisites: CSCI 345 or instructor permission
    • Instruction: Yasmine Elglaly
    • Previously Offered: Fall 2021, CRN 44199, 44644
    • Future Offering(s): TBD

Disability and Advocacy (DIAD*)

*Previously offered as EXCE courses

DIAD 205 (Prev. EXCE 205) – Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media (BCGM GUR)
  • Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media
    • Description: 4 Credits. BCGM GUR. Introduction to the experience and perspectives of those with disabilities.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: online asynchronous & hybrid offerings
    • Offered every quarter!

English (ENG)

ENG 201 – Writing in the Humanities: Disability in YA Novels
  • ENG 201: Writing in the Humanities: Disability in YA Novels
    • Title: Representation of Disability in Books Written for Children and Young Adults
    • Description: 5 Credits; CCOM
      • English 201 is a composition course that offers advanced instruction and practice in writing using ideas, texts and questions from a specified topic in the humanities. This section of 201 will examine the social significance, cultural power, and personal influence—not to mention delight—of children’s books and young adult literature as the underlying topic of our research and writing. In particular, we’ll look at how disability is portrayed to children. 
    • Instruction: English Department Faculty; Cathy McDonald
    • Previously offered: Winter 2022, CRN 10765
ENG 301 – Disability and Public Writing
  • English 301: Writing and the Public Title: Disability and Public Writing
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course examines the concept of disability through a social and cultural lens, exploring its intersections with writing studies and the topic of public writing. We will think about what disability means in different contexts as it relates to rhetoric and public actions, such as activism and community building. We will observe that disability has long been a matter of public debate. In a traditional, medical context, we often think about disability as a medical issue, a disorder, or a physical or mental abnormality. As we will observe in this class, these medical definitions are severely limited and often rooted in accepted cultural biases about what is normal and which lives matter more than others. We will examine the ways we think about disability more broadly. What stories and cultural traditions tell us about whether it is good or bad to have a disability? What cultural values and political priorities have brought groups of disabled people together throughout history and still today? These questions will bring us into a much more dynamic and exciting conversation about what disability means, both for ourselves and for the world around us.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Section details: Online Asynchronous, CRN 30616
ENG 401 – Writing & Rhetoric: Disability Rhetoric
  • ENG 401: Writing & Rhetoric: Disability Rhetoric
    • Title: Sr Writing Studies / Rhet Sem: Disability Rhetoric
    • Description: 5 credits
      • Disability means different things depending on your point of view. From a medical perspective, disability has to do with the body. From a legal perspective, disability has to do with civil rights. From a rhetorician’s perspective, disability has to do with a wide range of stories, debates, tropes, biases, and identities. Our task in this course is to examine the different ways disability is and has been understood across different contexts. We will examine the growing movement of rhetorical study focused on disability, moving from classical rhetorical traditions to contemporary rhetorics of autism, mental disability, and the disabled body. We will see that in some situations, to be disabled is to be devoid of rhetorical power, to be forbidden from speaking for yourself. We will also see disability claimed as an asset of rhetorical power, a source of authority
      • Notes & Prerequisites: ENG 301 or ENG 302 or ENG 370 or ENG 371, or instructor permission; senior status.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Previously Offered: Fall 2021, CRN 44211; Su25, CRN
    • This class can count as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies with Advisor/ICDS approval
ENG 418 – Disability & Literature (Senior Seminar)
  • ENG 418 – Senior Seminar in Disability & Literature
    • Description: 5 Credits. WP3. An advanced seminar offering an in-depth exploration of specialized topics. Requires students to develop scholarly projects integrating course material with their own literary, historical, and theoretical interests.
    • Instruction: Allison Giffen
    • Section details: face-to-face
    • Prerequisites: ENG prerequisites and senior status required
    • Recent offering(s): Spring 2023 TR 10:00 – 11:50 am, CRN 20415
    • Next offerings(s): TBD
ENG 397K – Cultural Disability Studies
  • ENG 397K: Cultural Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 cr; Humanities GUR
      • This course offers an introduction to the key philosophies and scholarly approaches of Disability Studies in the humanities. Students will study literature, film, and everyday texts to understand the concept of “disability” as a social and cultural phenomenon. Through their work in this class, students will develop an increased understanding of disability as a valuable form of diversity. Students will leave prepared to apply Disability Studies ideas and approaches to their future courses in almost any field in the social sciences, humanities, education, and beyond. This course will also provide a comprehensive basis for students interested in pursuing more advanced work in future Disability Studies courses.
    • Instruction: English Department Faculty; Andrew Lucchesi
    • Previously offered: Spring 2021
ENG 497D – Literature and Disability
  • ENG 497B: Literature and Disability: Disability in Nineteenth-Century US Literature and Culture
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course will introduce you to some of the foundational scholarship in Critical Disability Studies specifically as it pertains to literature and the cultural work of disability.  Focusing specifically on nineteenth-century US literature, we will explore representations of people with disabilities in literature, social perceptions of disability, and the perspective of writers with disabilities. One of the central goals of this course is to explore disability as a social construction and then investigate its fascinating intersections with other identity categories, including race, class, gender, and age. The nineteenth century offers us an especially rich cultural moment when identities like disability, childhood, and blackness and whiteness were becoming codified by way of enlightenment rationality, empirical science, and the nineteenth-century’s drive to classify. We will examine these intersecting and mutually constitutive identities as they are represented in short stories, poetry, and memoir. We will look to primary texts by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rebecca Harding Dave, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Emily Dickinson, and Elizabeth Packard, along with a variety of short stories published in St. Nicholas Magazine, an influential children’s periodical. And, we will read these primary materials alongside such disability scholars as Lennard Davis, Rosemarie Garland Thomson, Douglas C. Baynton, Nirmala Erevelles, and Mitchell and Snyder.
    • Instruction: Allison Giffen
    • Prerequisites: Eng 202 or Instructor permission
    • Section details: face-to-face
    • Next Offering: Fall 2023, MWF 1:00-2:20, IS 242, CRN 44113.
    • This class can count as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies with Advisor/ICDS approval

Human Services

HSP 443 – Disability: Individuals and Systems

Leadership Studies (LDST)

LDST 416 – Disability Inclusivity in Leadership
  • LDST 416: Disability Inclusivity in Leadership
    • Title: Disability Inclusivity in Leadership
    • Description: 3 credits
      • People with disabilities are diverse in their range of abilities and intersect with every other identity. One in five people has a disability. As leaders, do we know how to be inclusive to people with disabilities in our work? In LDST 416, you will learn the often-untold history of the U.S. Disability Rights Movement and explore the current issues facing people with disabilities. Learn how to be more inclusive in your current and future leadership efforts through the journey of a disability rights activist, diverse essays about disability, and disability sensitivity training. We end the course by exploring a topic you choose related to the future of disability rights through a project. Daman is a national disability rights advocate, entrepreneur, and instructor. As a WWU student, Daman led the effort to create the A.S. Disability Outreach Center. Daman consults on disability topics for organizations small and large, across the country. He now teaches a course on Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media here at WWU.
      • The course prerequisite is LDST 101, or email morse.institute@wwu.edu for an override.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Previously Offered: Fall 2021, CRN 43344
    • Contact:  morse.institute@wwu.edu

Religion (REL)

REL 330 – Religion and Disability
  • REL 330:  Religion and Disability
    • Description: 5 cr; BCGM GUR
      • This discussion-based course resituates the study of religion within a Critical Disability Studies framework in order to register the prismatic, ambivalent relationships between human variation and religious traditions. By pairing recent scholarship with literature, film, and other textual materials, it foregrounds the ways that, historically speaking, religions have not only structured possibilities for people with disabilities, but also have provided opportunities for disabled people to create alternative lifeworlds and imagine otherwise futures.
    • Instruction: Department of Global Humanities and Religions; Kathleen Brian
    • Previously offered: Fall 2021
    • Contact: GHR@wwu.edu

Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGSS)

WGSS 367 – Feminist Disability Studies
  • WGSS 367: Feminist Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits. This class explores the fields of Disability Studies and Feminist Studies to see what each can bring to the other.
    • Instruction: Anika Tilland-Stafford
    • Previous offerings: 
    • Next offering(s): Fall 2023


Courses in development:

CSEC 397x – Disability and Access in the Sciences
  • CSEC 397x (placeholder course number): Disability & Access in STEM
    • Description: 3 Credits. This College of Science and Engineering Collaborations elective explores ableism, disablism, access, and Universal Design for Learning in the sciences.
    • Instruction: G (GIM) McGrew
    • Previous offerings:  N/A
    • Next offering(s): Winter or Spring 2026

For faculty: Have new courses to add to the list? Please use this form: wp.wwu.edu/disabilitycollaborative/courses/add-new/.


Recent Coursework Archive by Quarter

We’ll be keeping a list of our offered courses and their descriptions archived in this section.

Fall 2025

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF, OL, multiple sections)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kyann Flint, Daman Wandke
    • Section details: FTF TTh 10-12 CRN 42686, and remote asynchronous, CRN 42529
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies (4Cr, OL)
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Accessible Communication and Leadership
    • Description: 4 Credits
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: Online Async, CRN 43117
    • This course is crosslisted with LDST 416, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Summer 2025

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, OL)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: 6-week, remote asynchronous, CRN 30503
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, OL, multiple sections)
  • DISA 350: Topics in Critical Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits.
      • This class focuses on the ways disability identity, expression, and community have deep connections to rhetorical traditions both ancient and contemporary. Topics will range from the rhetoric of personal disclosure, to the power of community writing about disability, to the ways disabled voices promote accessibility and activist reforms. We will draw from the Disability Justice principles of intersectionality, cross-movement solidarity, and collective liberation. What does it mean to question what is normal, or to move beyond individualist binaries of ability and disability? How can we be attentive to the connections between embodiment and rhetorical agency? Projects for this class will include recording public-facing videos and writing original research papers or creative projects on topics of your choosing.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Section details: Online Async (6-week), CRN
    • This course is crosslisted with ENG 401, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Accessible Communication and Leadership
    • Description: 4 Credits
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: Online Async (6-week), CRN
    • This course is crosslisted with LDST 416, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Spring 2025

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kristen Chmielewski
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, FTF 10:00 – 11:50 am CRN 22814
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Disrupting Tales of the Disability Experience (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Disability & Inclusion in Management
    • Description: 4 Credits.
      • This section of DISA 350 interrogates public tales of disability that come from creative non-fictional narratives like memoirs, or fictive accounts like movies, for the purpose of disrupting able-bodied cultural imperatives of the disability experience. We will critique the literature and popular media that shape beliefs about the way the lives of embodied disability work and ask why literary texts have the power they do.

        If you don’t have a disability, or know someone who does, how do you know what the life experience of disability is like, how it feels? Memoirs and movies. And often, because the general public wants a coherent story with an ending that is at least resolved if not happy, the person in the story learns to overcome the dysfunction and is “virtually abled” again. As the credits roll by or the book closes, a feeling of satisfaction reassures the audience that this tale is indeed true. The portrayal is a cultural imperative. Using disability and literary theory, this class will consider stories that disrupt these public tales of private lives.
    • Instruction: Cathy McDonald
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, MW 4:00 – 5:50 pm, CRN 22813
    • This course is cross-listed with HRM 426, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Disability & Inclusion in Management (4 Cr, Hybrid)
  • DISA 350: Topics in CDS: Disability & Inclusion in Management
    • Description: 4 Credits.
      • In this course, students will gain a comprehensive understanding of integrating disability inclusion in the modern business environment. The focus will be on critical areas such as adopting inclusive employment techniques, nurturing a workplace atmosphere conducive to diversity, and ensuring inclusivity in customer service. The course will examine both the challenges and potential advantages of implementing disability-inclusive practices in the workplace. By interacting with articles and practical case studies, students will discover how embedding disability-friendly policies and practices can not only ensure compliance but also significantly enhance the organizational culture and operational efficiency.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: Hybrid in-person and online, meets T 2:00 – 3:50 pm, CRN 23486
    • This course is cross-listed with HRM 426, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Winter 2025

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF, OL)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kyann Flint, Daman Wandke
    • Section details: FTF 8 – 9:50 am CRN 12907, and remote asynchronous, CRN 13836
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Disability in the Arts / Dance (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 350: Topics in Critical Disability Studies: Disability and the Arts / Dance
    • Description: 5 Credits.
    • Instruction: Pam Kuntz
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, TTh 12 – 1:50 pm, CRN 12906
    • This course can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Fall 2024

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF, OL)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kyann Flint, Daman Wandke
    • Section details: FTF 8 – 9:50 am CRN 12907, and remote asynchronous, CRN 13836
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Accessible Communication and Leadership (4 Cr, OL)
  • DISA 350: Topics in Critical Disability Studies: Accessible Communication and Leadership
    • Description: 4 Credits
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: Remote Async, CRN 44021
    • This course is crosslisted with LDST 416, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 450 – Capstone in Critical Disability Studies (5Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 450: Capstone in Critical Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • This course counts as the final of the three Core Classes for the Minor

Summer 2024

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5 Cr, OL)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Anika Tilland-Stafford EDIT: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Section details: Remote Synchronous, 10 – 11:50 am MTWR , CRN 30656 EDIT: Remote Asynchronous, 6-week.
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Spring 2024

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5 Cr, OL)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Section details: remote asynchronous, CRN 23591
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Disability and Intersectional Equity in K-12 Schools (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 350: Topics in Critical Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits.
    • Instruction: Lindsay Foreman-Murray
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, MW 10:00 – 11:50 am, CRN 23590
    • This course is crosslisted with SPED 310, and can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies

Winter 2024

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kristen Chmielewski
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, TR 02:00-03:50 pm, CRN 13823
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
DISA 350 – Topics in CDS: Disability Moves (5 Cr, FTF)
  • DISA 350: Topics in Critical Disability Studies: Disability Moves
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course examines disability in dance through investigating choreographers, dancers, educators, and activists. Students will engage in readings, viewings and discussions to culminate in a research project of their choosing. On occasion class may take place in a dance studio environment.
    • Instruction: Pam Kuntz
    • Section details: in-person Bellingham, TR 10:00-11:50 am, CRN 13822
    • This can count as either a Core Class or Elective in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
ENG 401 – Writing & Rhetoric: Disability Rhetoric (5 Cr, FTF)
  • ENG 401: Writing & Rhetoric: Disability Rhetoric
    • Title: Sr Writing Studies / Rhet Sem: Disability Rhetoric
    • Description: 5 credits. Disability means different things depending on your point of view. From a medical perspective, disability has to do with the body. From a legal perspective, disability has to do with civil rights. From a rhetorician’s perspective, disability has to do with a wide range of stories, debates, tropes, biases, and identities. Our task in this course is to examine the different ways disability is and has been understood across different contexts. We will examine the growing movement of rhetorical study focused on disability, moving from classical rhetorical traditions to contemporary rhetorics of autism, mental disability, and the disabled body. We will see that in some situations, to be disabled is to be devoid of rhetorical power, to be forbidden from speaking for yourself. We will also see disability claimed as an asset of rhetorical power, a source of authority
    • Notes & Prerequisites: ENG 301 or ENG 302 or ENG 370 or ENG 371, or instructor permission; senior status.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • This class can count as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies with Advisor/ICDS approval! Contact icds@wwu.edu
HNRS 350 – Disability Inequality and Advocacy in the United States (3 Cr, FTF)
  • HNRS 350: Disability Inequality and Advocacy in the United States
    • Title: Honors Seminar – Disability Inequality and Advocacy in the United States
    • Description: 3 credits. Historian Douglas C. Baynton writes, “Disability is everywhere in history, once you begin looking for it, but conspicuously absent in the histories we write.” Building upon that idea, disability is everywhere in society. Ideas about disability shape our language—“the blind leading the blind”—and our insults. Disability provides motivation for villains in children’s movies, like Captain Hook, and moments of tragic catharsis in classic literature, like in Of Mice and Men. Disability shapes educational policies, practices, and curriculum while also affecting employment policies, like subminimum wage and retirement and disability benefits and stipulations. Everyone, if they live long enough, will experience disability at some point in their lives. Disability is everywhere in the United States but is conspicuously absent from most conversations of identity, justice, and equity.
      In this seminar, students explore the historical roots of current issues faced by the disabled community to examine how definitions of disability have changed over time and how current injustices are engineered and enforced rather than inevitable and natural. Each week will focus on a different facet of life—law, education, the medical system, immigration, media representation, recreation, and employment—with one class covering readings and discussion that provide historical context and the other focusing on readings, discussion, and activities related to current issues. The culminating work in the course will be a “Disability Excavation” project in which the students conduct original archival research—either in the WWU archives or online—to trace the history and evolution of a disability issue they have encountered in their own lives or in their field.
    • Notes & Prerequisites: Requires admission to Honors College; Jr or Senior status
    • Instruction: Kristen Chmielewski
    • This class can count as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies with Advisor/ICDS approval! Contact icds@wwu.edu

Fall 2023

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies
  • DISA 330: Critical Disability Studies – GUR
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: online asynchronous, CRN 44074, 44496
    • This is a Core Class in our Minor in Critical Disability Studies
WGSS 367 – Feminist Disability Studies
  • WGSS 367: Feminist Disability Studies
    • Description: 5 Credits. This class explores the fields of Disability Studies and Feminist Studies to see what each can bring to the other.
      • Unraveling ableist norms and structures is intersectional work, it is decolonizing and anti-racist work, and it is feminist and queer. We live in a settler colonial context where hetero/patriarchy instituted gender hierarchies, regulated sexuality, and classified bodies as holding greater and lesser value along ableist and capitalist lines. All of these foundations and structures limit bodily sovereignty, the capacity to be self-determining agents who live with the right to connection and authority over our bodies.
        In Feminist Disability Studies we will examine historical fudations that unpin ableist constructions of citizenship and belonging as well as differing approaches to movements for disability justice. Throughout the course we will emphasize Intersectional Bodily Sovereignty with topics such as embodiment, sexuality, and food. Students will have the opportunity to bring their own disciplinary and creative work to the course.
    • Instruction: Anika Tilland-Stafford
    • Section details: Remote Synchronous, MW 04:00-06:20 pm, CRN 42943
    • This class counts as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies!
ENG 497D – Literature and Disability: Disability in Nineteenth-Century US Literature and Culture
  • ENG 497D: Literature and Disability: Disability in Nineteenth-Century US Literature and Culture
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course will introduce you to some of the foundational scholarship in Critical Disability Studies specifically as it pertains to literature and the cultural work of disability.  Focusing specifically on nineteenth-century US literature, we will explore representations of people with disabilities in literature, social perceptions of disability, and the perspective of writers with disabilities. One of the central goals of this course is to explore disability as a social construction and then investigate its fascinating intersections with other identity categories, including race, class, gender, and age. The nineteenth century offers us an especially rich cultural moment when identities like disability, childhood, and blackness and whiteness were becoming codified by way of enlightenment rationality, empirical science, and the nineteenth-century’s drive to classify. We will examine these intersecting and mutually constitutive identities as they are represented in short stories, poetry, and memoir. We will look to primary texts by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rebecca Harding Dave, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Emily Dickinson, and Elizabeth Packard, along with a variety of short stories published in St. Nicholas Magazine, an influential children’s periodical. And, we will read these primary materials alongside such disability scholars as Lennard Davis, Rosemarie Garland Thomson, Douglas C. Baynton, Nirmala Erevelles, and Mitchell and Snyder.
    • Instruction: Allison Giffen
    • Section details: face-to-face, MWF 1:00-2:20, IS 242, CRN 44113.
    • Prerequisites: Eng 202 or Instructor permission
    • This class can count as an Elective for our Minor in Critical Disability Studies with Advisor/ICDS approval

Summer 2023

DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies – NEW OFFERING + GUR!
  • DISA 330 – Critical Disability Studies – NEW OFFERING + GUR!
    • Description: 5 Credits. BCGM GUR. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: online asynchronous, CRN 31022
ENG 301 – Disability and Public Writing
  • English 301: Writing and the Public
    • Title: Disability and Public Writing
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course examines the concept of disability through a social and cultural lens, exploring its intersections with writing studies and the topic of public writing. We will think about what disability means in different contexts as it relates to rhetoric and public actions, such as activism and community building. We will observe that disability has long been a matter of public debate. In a traditional, medical context, we often think about disability as a medical issue, a disorder, or a physical or mental abnormality. As we will observe in this class, these medical definitions are severely limited and often rooted in accepted cultural biases about what is normal and which lives matter more than others. We will examine the ways we think about disability more broadly. What stories and cultural traditions tell us about whether it is good or bad to have a disability? What cultural values and political priorities have brought groups of disabled people together throughout history and still today? These questions will bring us into a much more dynamic and exciting conversation about what disability means, both for ourselves and for the world around us.
    • Instruction: Andrew Lucchesi
    • Section details: Online Asynchronous, CRN 30616

Spring 2023

DISA 397A – Critical Disability Studies – NEW (*counts as DISA 330 for the Minor)
  • DISA 397A – Critical Disability Studies – NEW!
    • Description: 5 Credits. This course provides an exploration of the field of critical disability studies. Students will learn about several central topics, including disability rights and disability justice movements, cultural criticism of literature and popular media, and the principles of universal design in physical and digital spaces. Students will explore disability as an identity category that intersects with other identity categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. This is an interdisciplinary course designed for students from any major.
    • Instruction: Kristen Chmielewski
    • Section details: face-to-face, TR 10:00 – 11:50 am, CRN 24011
    • Notes: In AY 2023-34, Critical Disability Studies will run as DISA 330, a GUR that will be offered in face-to-face as well as hybrid/remote modalities
ENG 410 – Disability & Literature (Senior Seminar)
  • ENG 418 – Senior Seminar in Disability & Literature
    • Description: 5 Credits. WP3. An advanced seminar offering an in-depth exploration of specialized topics. Requires students to develop scholarly projects integrating course material with their own literary, historical, and theoretical interests.
    • Instruction: Allison Giffen
    • Section details: face-to-face, TR 10:00 – 11:50 am, CRN 20415, ENG prerequisites and senior status required.
EXCE 205 – Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media (BCGM GUR)
  • EXCE 205: Disability, Diversity, and the Mass Media
    • Description: 4 Credits. BCGM GUR. Introduction to the experience and perspectives of those with disabilities.
    • Instruction: Daman Wandke
    • Section details: online asynchronous & hybrid offerings
      • CRN 22683, T 2-3:50 pm, Hybrid
      • CRN 22684, T 4-5:50 pm, Hybrid
      • CRN 23620, W 2-3:50 pm, Hybrid
      • CRN 24071, online asynchronous
EXCE 101 – Elementary ASL/Culture (ACGM GUR)
  • EXCE 101: Elementary ASL/Culture
    • Description: 5 Credits. ACGM GUR.
    • Instruction: Linda Boyd
    • Section Details: Face-to-face. MW 1-3:20 pm, CRN 23229 & 23660

Additional disability studies course offerings coming soon!

Winter Quarter 2022

Looking forward to a forthcoming disability studies minor, many faculty at Western across many disciplines have been working on adapting their courses to cross-list with the newly-approved DISA course prefix, as well as developing new coursework entirely.

Check out our current growing list of courses completed or in development here (link).  And of course, the Curriculum Committee would love to hear from any faculty interested in adding their coursework or developing coursework to contribute to this interdisciplinary program!

Disability Studies Minor Curriculum, Disability Studies Minor

New Institute for Critical Disability Studies Approved by Provost

March 21, 2022

It’s happening!

After submitting a full proposal for the institute at the beginning of Summer 2021 and lengthy negotiation with the Provost’s office, the Disability Studies and Action Collaborative is pleased to announce that the Provost’s office has agreed to establish our new Institute for Critical Disability Studies for Spring 2022 and Fall 2022.

Our next stages in the institute formation include selection of interim co-directors for the institute to work with the Interim Advisory Council and the DS Steering Committee during Spring and Summer 2022; working on institute bylaws including organization and committee structures; and to hold a formal search process for two co-director roles to start in Fall 2022.

We are looking forward to building community alongside these administrative elements by continuing to hold events, from student-centered engagements to faculty-facing professional development opportunities.

Thank you for joining us as we continue this exciting journey!

 

Disability Studies Institute, Disability Studies Minor 2022, Disability Studies Institute, DSSC, Interim Advisory Council

DSSC Schedule for 2021-22

Members of the Disability Studies Steering Committee (DSSC) are looking forward to an exciting academic year. We hope you will make room in your schedule for one, several, or all of the following:  

 

  • The schedule for the DSSC, its working subcommittees, and the Interim Advisory Council is now available on the Events page. The calendar offers several options for adding events to a personal calendar, and we look forward to seeing you in the fall.

 

  • Also on the Events page, you will find the Programs Subcommittee’s series of upcoming events. Join us for the Intersections Roundtable, the 2022 UnConference, or the DS Scholars Spotlight. These events are just the beginning, so keep checking back for more speakers, workshops, and opportunities for disability justice activism.   

 

  • Do you know of an event that should be featured on the DSSC’s calendar? Email Kathleen Brian (briank@wwu.edu) to share the news. 

Events, Events and Meeting Scheduling AY 2021-22, Curriculum Subcommittee, Development and Outreach Subcommittee, DSSC, Events, Interim Advisory Council, Programs Subcommittee

Events

Save the Date!

Fall UnConference – Saturday & Sunday, October 22 – 23, 2022

Learn more about the UnConference

Upcoming Workshops, Panels, and Lectures

Check back for upcoming AY 2022-23 events!

Events Calendar

Nov
14

Teaching Workshop: Accommodation 101

On November 14, 2025 at 3:00 pm
Oct
17

Disability in Place: Unmaking as Practice – Pre-UnConference Public Keynote

On October 17, 2025 at 11:00 am
May
22

Teaching Workshop: Applying Disability Justice Principles to Teaching Across the Disciplines

On May 22, 2025 at 3:00 pm
May
16

ICDS Scholars Week Student Showcase

On May 16, 2025 at 4:00 pm
May
13

ICDS Scholars Week Keynote

On May 13, 2025 at 5:00 pm

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Like a Fingerprint: Living the Adaptive Martial Arts Lifestyle (2026-01-20)

On January 20, 2026 at 4:00 pm
Posted in At WWUcollabConferences, Lectures, & WorkshopsICDS HighlightsIn-Person EventMartial ArtsVirtual event
Tuesday, January 20, 20264:00 – 4:50 pmHybrid Event: In-person in Carver Gym CV 103 and on Zoom Register for the Zoom…
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Disability Studies and Action Collaborative

Welcome to the Disability Studies and Active Collaborative (DSAC). We were founded at Western Washington University in 2019 by a group of students, faculty, staff, alumni, and members of the local community. We have two major components to our work.

On one side, we seek to promote the field of disability studies, an interdisciplinary subject that explores the cultural and social experiences of disabled people, now and throughout time. We wish to draw new students and faculty into this exciting field of study, and to create new venues where disability studies scholarship can be shared.

On the other side, we seek to help bridge the gap between academia and the broader community by providing programs and events where people with many different connections do disability can meet and learn from each other. We wish to learn about and contribute to addressing issues of disability rights within our local community and beyond.

What this Website Contains

We update this website frequently throughout the academic year, so some things may have changed since your last visit. Find the navigation links on the right side of the screen.

  • DSAC Network discusses the large group of students, faculty, and staff who make up this broader community. 
  • WWU Disability Studies Institute discusses the new interdisciplinary institute for critical disability studies at Western, including links to archived pages documenting our processes for establishing the institute.
    • Click on the 2023 ICDS Showcase tab to learn more about our first full year as an institute.
  • Events and Announcements includes major institute new and upcoming event details.  You can also find an archive of events in calendar form through our Events page, including a link to the archived materials from our 2019 DSAC UnConference.  
  • Critical Disability Studies Program discusses the academic program in development, including a listing of new DISA coursework now available and in development.  You can also learn about the new Minor in Critical Disability Studies!
  • Student Employment & Scholarships includes undergraduate and graduate student job opportunities, as well as available scholarship, internship, and independent study opportunities as they arise.

The WWU DSAC Network

The DSAC Network meets throughout the academic year to work on programs related to DSAC’s mission. The DSAC Network is comprised of approximately 50 people from Western Washington University, including students, staff, faculty, program directors, deans, administrators, and university trustees. To learn more, email icds@wwu.edu 

Our current projects include:

  • Developing student support and mentorship programs for students and faculty with disabilities
  • Hosting public events such as symposia, speaker series, conferences, and workshops
  • Establishing an institute in disability studies at Western Washington University – Launched Spring 2022!
  • Establish an academic program, including new courses under the DISA course prefix, as well as creating a minor in critical disability studies

Recent News & Events

  • 5th Annual UnConference kicks off with a public keynote on October 17October 9, 2025
    We at the WWU Institute for Critical Disability Studies are excited for now our 5th Annual Disability Studies & Action Collaborative UnConference happening the weekend of Saturday…
  • ICDS Co-Directors 2024 Year-End MessageDecember 31, 2024
    Thank you to everyone who has supported our work up to now. We only exist because of this network of students, faculty, staff, and community members who…
  • ICDS Scholarships Available Now! – Application deadline Wednesday May 01, 2024April 11, 2024
    The Institute for Critical Disability Studies is now accepting applications to be disbursed this Fall 2024! Student opportunities include the Mark West Scholarship and two new ICDS…

More News and Announcements…


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