Sooner or later, everyone will develop at least some limitations in vision, hearing, dexterity or learning.
“Run by the Mobile Manufacturer’s Forum, the Global Accessibility Reporting Initiative is a project designed to help consumers learn more about the accessibility features of mobile devices and to help them identify devices with the features that may assist them with their particular needs.” Consumers can learn about features for Hearing, Vision, Speech, Dexterity, and Cognition needs and identify through an interactive process, the phone, tablet, or mobile app that is best for them.
Visit the GARI website to learn more or to find the device with the accessibility features that work best for you.
People with disabilities are the largest minority in the world and underrepresented in many professions, including entertainment. With frankness, humor and wit, comedienne Maysoon Zayid tackles the stigma of disability in the entertainment industry and in society at large. She has a message worth hearing.
One of the most recognized symbols world-wide is the disability symbol, officially called the International Symbol of Access (ISA). The symbol, which features a stick figure in a wheelchair with a blue-and-white color scheme, has been given a make-over for the twenty-first century.
The symbol, designed by Susanne Koefed in 1968 at the request of Rehabilitation International’s International Commission on Technology and Accessibility has been criticized by some as portraying the disabled as limited, passive and helpless. (For a history of the International Symbol of Access, visit, History of the Handicapped Symbol and Rehabilitation International: Symbol of Access.)
The Make-Over
The logo’s new look is the work of a design team at Gordon College in Massachusetts. The team decided to create a logo that aims to change the negative connotations of the original logo. The new design still maintains the traditional blue and white color scheme but shows the stick figure leaning forward and active. Like the traditional logo, the new design has critics as well as fans. Critics say the new symbol has too much emphasis on activeness when the same result could have been achieved a little more subtly.
Rolling Out
The revamped logo has rolled out across accessible entry ramps and entries, parking signs, and bathroom doors. I most recently spotted it in the parking lot of the fitness and health center I frequent, and in the newly paved parking lot of the local community college.
Downloadable Disability Access Symbols
Want to promote and publicize the accessibility of your business or services? The “wheelchair symbol” isn’t the only symbol of access. The Graphic Artists Guild Foundation with support and technical assistance from the Office for Special Constituencies, National Endowment has produced 12 different symbols that indicate the type of access available. The symbols have been designed for use by both public and private entities to advertise available facilities to patrons both disabled or able-bodied.
Free vector downloads of the 12 disability access symbols are available; the Graphic Artists Guild has a complete set of the symbols in TIFF format in a ZIP file at Downloadable Disability Access Symbols.