What does digital accessibility look like in practice -- and how can busy faculty make meaningful progress without redesigning their entire course?
Professor Nancy Kusmaul -- outgoing Faculty Senate President and incoming Chair and Associate Dean of the School of Social Work -- offers a perspective grounded in everyday teaching.
Rather than describing accessibility as an added task, she emphasizes that it often builds on what faculty are already doing. Small adjustments - checking a document or considering how course materials are shared - can make a meaningful difference to students. Her advice to colleagues? Start small and stay consistent.
“The best first step is to just take it a little bit at a time.”
Kusmaul encourages faculty to focus on manageable actions -- reviewing one week’s material, running one accessibility checker, or making incremental changes as the semester progresses. This approach not only reduces feeling overwhelmed, it can build sustainable habits over time. She also underscores an important shift in mindset: accessibility is not about perfection.
“What can you do today to make your content a little bit more accessible than it was yesterday?”
Perhaps most importantly, Kusmaul reminds us why this work matters. Accessible course materials support not only students who request accommodation, it also helps those who may never ask -- removing barriers before they impact learning.
How can you get involved?
If you’re an instructor curious about your course’s accessibility score, Ally’s course report is available directly in Blackboard - look for the Ally Accessibility Report under Books & Course Tools.
For more information, see the following resources:
- umbc.edu/go/allydemo
- umbc.edu/go/allytraining
- umbc.edu/go/allyfaqs
- umbc.edu/go/allyreport (requiresUMBC VPN to view from off-campus)
- UMBC Digital Accessibility
- USM Digital Accessibility Hub