Archive for the ‘2010’ Category

Planning on Taking the Bar with Screen-Access Software?

Friday, December 31st, 2010

If so, the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) wants to hear from you…

Anyone who anticipates asking to take the bar, including the multistate bar exam and/or the multistate professional responsibility exam, with screen access software on or after July 2011 (that is, 1L’s and 2L’s as well as 3L’s), please contact NFB’s Chris Danielsen (). The NFB is contemplating using associational standing to seek national relief to require the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE) to allow applicants to use their primary reading method in taking the examinations the NCBE controls.  This would not require that you be plaintiffs, but would support the ability to get a national ruling. Even if you are not sure which bar you intend to take, as long as the possibilities include one of the 53 jurisdictions that require the multistate bar exam, that should be sufficient.

NYU/Harvard Prelaw Summer Program

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Trials is a partnership of NYU School of Law, Harvard Law School, and the Advantage Testing Foundation. It is a summer study program for students of modest means whose backgrounds are underrepresented at the nation’s top law schools.

For five weeks in July and August, Trials students take residence at Harvard or New York University. The residency alternates from year to year, with Harvard Law School hosting the program in 2011.

Deadline for applications is January 31st. For more info: http://trials.atfoundation.org/program/index

Travel Stipends for Conference Available!

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Funding to Attend the 2011 NALSWD Conference – Register Now!

Due to the generosity of our donors, we are pleased to be able to offer funding to make it possible for students who cannot otherwise secure funding to attend the conference!

Funding is limited to $300 per student maximum. These stipends can be used to cover economy airfare and/or up to $75 towards lodging (equivalent to 2 nights at a hostel, but can be applied towards hotel costs).

All travel stipends will be issued as reimbursements after the conference, so please save all receipts if you want to apply for funding. Travel costs paid by your school, vocational rehabilitation, or anyone other than the student attending cannot be reimbursed. Award of stipends will be at the discretion of the Executive Board, but we hope to use our funding to bring as many students as possible to the conference!

For full details about this funding, go to http://www.nalswd.org/wordpress/apply-for-travel-funding/ (this page will be updated when and if details change).

To register your interest in receiving funding, please note that in the “Other Input?” section of your conference registration – on the Registration Form – and by emailing with your expected costs so we can arrange funding accordingly.

Register Now!

Full Information about the conference, including a Tentative ScheduleLodging Recommendations, a Conference FAQ, and – most importantly – the Registration Form, are now available online!

White House Summer Internships

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

See the press release below for instructions on how to apply for White House internships this summer (along with a short inspirational message from President Obama). The deadline is January 9th.

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We are writing to let you know that the White House Internship Program’s summer 2011 application has been posted. The application deadline is Sunday, January 9. We hope that you can share the information with student leaders across your network. For more information and to apply, please visit www.WhiteHouse.gov/internship.


This program will mentor and cultivate young leaders of today and tomorrow and I’m proud that they will have this opportunity to serve…I want to commend all who apply for their desire to help through public service to forge a brighter future for our country.”

—President Barack Obama, May 22, 2009

President Obama believes in the capacity of young people to move America forward. He is committed to providing young leaders from across the nation an opportunity to develop their leadership skills and fostering a continued commitment to public service through the White House Internship Program. This hands-on program is designed to mentor and cultivate today’s young leaders, strengthen their understanding of the Executive Office of the President and prepare them for future roles in public service.

To learn more about the program, please visit whitehouse.gov/internships.

How To Apply:

Go to: www.whitehouse.gov/internships

A completed application includes:

two essays

three letters of recommendation

resume

The deadline for the Summer 2011 White House Internship Program is January 9, 2011

Scholarships for Students with Mental/Psychological Disabilities

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

See below for a wonderful scholarship opportunity if you have mental or psychological disabilities. Deadline for applications is January 4th, 2011.

Subject: Unique Opportunity to Complete Research and/or Creative Mental Health Project

Active Minds, the nation’s leading nonprofit organization dedicated to college student mental health, is offering an exciting opportunity for you to complete a research or creative project related to mental health and receive a stipend of $750 (with an additional $250 available for project expenses).  Learn more and download the application at www.activeminds.org/scholars.   All undergraduate and graduate students in the U.S. are eligible to apply.  The fellowship will connect you with a prestigious network of young scholars and national experts in the field of behavioral health.  APPLY TODAY!  Applications will be reviewed on rolling basis December 1, 2010 – January 4, 2011 and preference will be given to early submissions.

For questions, email Sara Abelson, (), Program Director of Active Minds.

COAT Gives Thanks for Accessible Tech

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

For those in the D.C. area, on November 30th, the Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT) and the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) are hosting an event to celebrate the passage and enactment of the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010.  See below for more details if you’re interested in attending….

Giving Thanks for Accessible Technology

Tuesday, November 30, 2010. 4-6 p.m.

Cannon Caucus Room

House Office Building, Capitol Hill

Speakers include Representative Ed Markey and Senator Mark Pryor

Emceed by The Honorable Tony Coehlo, Chairman, AAPD Board of Directors

Sponsored by the Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology (COAT)

and coordinated by the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD).

RSVP by Nov. 24 to: or (202) 521-4316

E-Textbook Rentals Offered to Students by STEPP

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

The U.S. DOE has awarded CourseSmart, Alternative Media Access Center and AccessText Network a grant of $1.1 million to support the STudent E-rent Pilot Project (STEPP), an eTextbook rental program aimed at improving low-cost access to higher education eTextbooks for all students, including those with print-related disabilities such as blindness or dyslexia.

If you use e-textbooks and are a member of the disability community, please see the press release below for information about how you can take advantage of this program.

Project Director: Christopher Lee, Enterprise Innovation Institute – Provost Office 75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 314 Atlanta, Georgia 30308 E-mail: Telephone: 404-894-7655

Summary: The Alternative Media Access Center (AMAC) in partnership with CourseSmart and the AccessText Network (ATN) have come together to request funding in support of an innovative, e-textbook rental program entitled the STudent E-rent Pilot Project (STEPP). While STEPP is designed to meet the textbook rental needs of any postsecondary student, the program is unique in that its textbook offerings are specially modified for accessibility, and comply with Section 504 requirements under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.

In brief, STEPP leverages the expertise of AMAC, one of the nation’s leaders in producing accessible educational text, with the established distribution network of CourseSmart, the nation’s number one electronic textbook rental service, and the reach of ATN, the nation’s only ―one-stop shop‖ for disability service providers with a need for alternative format text files. For the first time, students with disabilities will enjoy the benefits of significant cost savings inherent in a textbook rental program, as STEPP provides universally accessible e-textbook files for top titles.

Goals:

The goals of the STEPP initiative are as follows: (1) To save students an average of 50 percent off the retail cost for purchasing textbooks; (2) To provide students with disabilities an equal opportunity to participate in textbook rental programs and experience cost savings; (3) To develop and demonstrate a viable business model for rendering e-textbooks for rent, which are universally accessible to all; (4) To create awareness of the availability of universally accessible e-textbooks for rent; and (5) To increase knowledge and awareness amongst all players in the marketplace of the need for and the profitability of providing universally accessible e-textbooks.

Legal Opportunities at the HHS Office of General Counsel

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

We recently received word from Daniel Davis at the HHS of job opportunities in their office of general counsel. Please see below for details…

Qualified prospective applicants should check out the HHS Office of General Counsel’s career page at http://www.hhs.gov/ogc/careers/openings.htm. All job listings are posted there and individuals can sign up to be alerted every time a job posts. I strongly recommend anyone interested in a legal career at HHS sign up there.

Please note that the Office of the Inspector General and Office for Civil Rights are other offices with a number of legal jobs and post their jobs independently of the General Counsel’s office.


The Legal Aid Society – Employment Law Center Summer Clerkships

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Attention all law students with disabilities! The Legal Aid Society – Employment Law Center has summer clerkships available through their Workers’ Rights Clinics in the San Francisco area. In addition to participating as employment counselors at the clinics, participants may get the opportunity to represent workers who have been denied wages or unemployment insurance benefits.

The LAS-ELC has done outstanding work in the areas of disability and LGBT rights in addition to gender equity and racial equality. The Workers’ Rights Clinics assists low-income individuals with a wide ranger of work-related issues, such as denial of wages, discrimination, harassment, work safety, unemployment benefits and wrongful termination.

The summer clerkship program through the LAS-ELC is a full-time, 10-week program, typically beginning the day after Memorial Day. The LAS-ELC also offers seminars during the summer on a wide range of legal topics. Other events scheduled include baseball games, outdoor concerts and barbecues. Applicants are encouraged to apply as soon as possible. For more information about this amazing organization and to find out how to apply please visit: http://www.las-elc.org/about-clerkships.htm

ABA Survey on Disability Services at Law Schools

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Please encourage your law schools to fill out the ABA’s survey on their disability services programs (http://new.abanet.org/disability/Pages/lawschools.aspx). The survey was recently sent to law school associate deans, and  it helps keep the ABA’s information up to date.


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