Upcoming Accessibility Café: Wednesday, April 29 (11:30am-1:00pm)

Neurodiversity Workshop

This workshop will focus on creating a more accessible classroom environment for disabled and neurodivergent students in higher education. Attendees will learn approaches to remove or reduce barriers for neurodivergent students through neuro-affirming and accessible “best practices” for teaching and learning. These strategies can be used to improve accessibility for all students in your courses.
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Multi-Year Accessibility Plan 2026-2031 (MYAP)

ϳԹԴ is committed to building a campus where accessibility is a shared institutional value woven into how we teach, research, work, design spaces, communicate, and care for one another.
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2026 Learning Challenge Starts Now!

The HREO Learning Challenge is a set of self-directed learning opportunities designed to build foundational understandings of Indigenization-Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, Anti-Racism, and Accessibility (I-EDIAA).
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Upcoming Training Sessions

We offer a variety of synchronous training sessions. Check out our upcoming calendar to register for one.
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Sharing information and resources about employment equity with the ϳԹԴ community

Employment Equity Learning Community

The Employment Equity Learning Community (EELC) was established in 2021 to provide additional support and resources to campus hiring committee participants, particularly those serving as Employment Equity Representatives.
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ϳԹԴ is situated on traditional Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee Territory. To acknowledge this traditional territory is to recognize its longer history, one predating the establishment of the earliest European colonies. It is also to acknowledge this territory’s significance for the Indigenous peoples who lived, and continue to live, upon it –people whose practices and spiritualities were tied to the land and continue to develop in relationship to the territory and its other inhabitants today. The Kingston Indigenous community continues to reflect the area’s Anishinaabek and Haudenosaunee roots. There is also a significant Métis community and there are First Peoples from other Nations across Turtle Island present here today.