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Welcome to Working with What You’ve Got: Doing More with Less

Learn practical strategies to overcome constraints and leverage existing resources, policies, and procedures to maximize efficiency in service delivery. This presentation will provide creative solutions to common challenges faced by professionals in various organizations.

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Welcome to Working with What You’ve Got: Doing More with Less

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  1. Welcome toWorking with What You’ve Got: Doing More with Less Please be respectful of your colleagues by silencing your phone. If you need to answer a call, please go to the hallway.

  2. Conference Inclusion Statement We ask you to join us in creating a culture that reflects… Access and Inclusion & Civility and Respect …this week and in all aspects of our organization.

  3. Why Are We Qualified On This Topic? • Nicole Monsibais, MPA, JD • Current Compliance Officer and 504/Title IX Coordinator at Our Lady of the Lake University (OLLU). • Former Director, and only full-time professional employee of Services to Students with Disabilities (SSD) at OLLU. The SSD Office serves students at the main, two satellite, and online campuses. • Brandy Lerman, MEd, LPC • Current ADA & General Counselor, and only fully-time professional employee of Ability Services at Houston Community College (HCC) – Coleman College for Health Sciences. The Office of Counseling & Ability Services serves students in the Coleman, Coleman Tower, McGovern, and online campuses.

  4. Presentation Goals • Identify areas of constraints and develop creative service methods using additional staff, policies, and/or procedures • Understand how to leverage existing resources and create a “small ask” to maximize efficiency

  5. Maximize TimeIssues & Solutions

  6. Issue: Too Much Demand, Not Enough of You • Requests for assistance via phone and email do not get dedicated time • One appointment that runs long, shifts entire day back

  7. Solution: Strategic Scheduling • Add in buffer time to each student appointment • Add twice the buffer time to faculty consults

  8. Issue: Repetitive Tasks • Emails require a large amount of time to generate and are often repetitive • LOAs are high volume, leaving little time for individualization

  9. Solution: Email Signatures • Craft different email signatures for FAQ-type email responses

  10. Solution: LOA Templates • Create letter templates in case management system for LOAs categorized by accommodation types, including associated attachments/data forms

  11. Intentional CollaborationIssues & Solutions

  12. Issue: Limited Budget • Reduced number & quality of program events

  13. Solution: Inter-Departmental Collaboration • Collaborate with another department on student events • “Lunch & Learn” events at HCC Coleman are co-sponsored • Student Life provides lunch • Counseling & Ability Services provides presentation content • Both departments get credit for co-sponsoring event

  14. Issue: Programs Fear Losing MOUs/Affiliations • Each ADA student is seen as a “problem child,” and clinical sites will reduce the number of students permitted to be placed until MOU is dissolved

  15. Solution: Visit Affiliation / MOU Coordinator(s) • Advise Affiliation Coordinator to set expectations with site supervisors during MOU development • A student is not yet a master—mistakes are part of the learning curve • Discuss student needs without violating confidentiality • Identify viable clinical sites for ADA students before placing remaining cohort

  16. Issue: Inaccessible Course Materials • Textbook adaptation requires significant time and resources • Inaccessible faculty-created course reading materials

  17. Solution: Training for Textbook Selection • Multi-prong collaborative approach to develop training including: • Academic Affairs • Library • Bookstore • Center for Teaching Excellence

  18. Solution I: Academic Affairs • Faculty guidelines require selection of accessible course reading materials • When unavailable, require plan for future adaptation

  19. Solution II: Library • Course reading materials require utilizing Library Course Reserves • Eliminates inaccessible photocopied course materials

  20. Solution III: Bookstore • Accessible version availability listed on site and in store • Alerts students to turn in alternative textbook requests further in advance • Improves coordination with VA and other agency caseworkers to approve purchase of accessible versions

  21. Solution IV: Center for Teaching Excellence • Training for faculty to create accessible course materials while designing their courses • Provides notice of available ongoing training and resources

  22. Adapt Processes/ProceduresIssues & Solutions

  23. Issue: Too Many Students, Only One of You • Managing walk-in demand while scheduled appointments are in progress

  24. Solution: Who’s Next Software • The digital sign-in lobby captures the student ID number of each walk-in request for assistance • Student ID number used to access contact information for later follow-up • Instant message function enables communication with other staff while DS Provider is in session • More effectively manage walk-ins around scheduled appointments

  25. Issue: Requiring a Meeting for Meetings’ Sake • Not every student situation requires a meeting to renew LOA, and may be an additional barrier • It remains necessary to maintain the interactive process for LOA renewal

  26. Solution: Streamlining • Students use digital case management system to review and request accommodation renewals per course • Saves time by prioritizing meetings with only those students who need changes, or have any other issues that prompt the interactive process • LOA is crafted in real time during student meeting and digitally delivered with student’s consent

  27. Crafting A “Smaller Ask”Issues & Solutions

  28. Issue: Ideal Resolution = No Resolution At All • Asking for too much can overwhelm administrators’ perspectives of a genuine need, and lead to outright refusals for increased resources • Example: “Big Ask” for more support staff

  29. Solution: A “Smaller Ask” Can Still Help • “Smaller Ask” for a tablet to host DS confidential record system • Mobile access to DS records allows out-of-office faculty consults • Replaces back-and-forth email threads with streamlined communication • Supports personal touch that in-person dialogue provides • On-the-spot scheduling when DS Provider approached outside of office • Intake forms completed on tablet while DS Provider continues working

  30. Solution Insight: Timing • Finished research on alternative “Smaller Ask” for tablet device, before requesting “Big Ask” • Submitted “Smaller Ask” two days after “Big Ask” was denied––created sense of urgency to meet need • Pick Battles––more likely to gain buy-in by including fewer asks in each round of collaboration

  31. Issue: The Many Hats of a DS Provider • No dedicated Assistive Technology (AT) staff support • Example: “Big Ask” for dedicated AT staff position

  32. Solution: Reimagined Work Study Role • “Smaller Ask” to hire additional work study • Redeveloped work study position into an “AT Student Aide,” specializing in peer-to-peer user support • Expanded functional role of student support without compromising confidentiality

  33. Solution Insight: Retraining • Trained student workers on alternative textbook software and assistive technology • Students with accommodations utilizing this technology were assigned to an AT Aide for direct service

  34. Collaborate & DiscussIssues & Solutions

  35. Group Discussion • Please use a few minutes to collaborate with session peers • Presenters will bring conversation back to the whole audience • Discuss insight and potential solutions for volunteer scenarios

  36. P.S. Parting Gift • Installed a locked “Confidential Dropbox” outside DS office to allow students to drop off documents without requiring a staff person to be available • Eliminated risk of having other University staff nearby be responsible for confidential DS documents

  37. Thank you!Questions? Nicole Monsibais, MPA, JD | nlmonsibais@ollusa.edu Brandy Lerman, MEd, LPC | brandwyn.lerman@hccs.edu

  38. Session Evaluation Please see session moderator for paper evaluation form or complete the evaluation online.

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