Students with disabilities at Lincoln Middle School don’t always have 
access to the resources they need to get ahead. That’s where CSU’s Eye 
to Eye program comes in.
Eye to Eye, a national mentoring organization, allows college 
students with a learning disability to mentor junior high students who 
have learning disabilities or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder 
(LD/ADHD) through art.
“It is like organized chaos,” said Kim The, co-coordinator of the CSU
 chapter. “[The program chose art] because you can’t go wrong with art. 
These kids are told so often that they are always wrong and now they can
 finally be right.”
Students create projects like dioramas of their ideal learning 
environments and the apps to help with their disability. By taking this 
approach, students learn more about their disability and what resources 
are available, The said.
CSU’s Eye to Eye chapter is only in its first year, and hopes to have
 at least 10 college mentors signed up for the program. Recruiting 
members who fit the requirements and the time commitment is the biggest 
challenge.
“The hardest part is definitely recruiting members,” Co-Coordinator 
Kim Cara said. “It is also finding people who fit the criteria. Some 
people want to do it, but don’t realize that it is for students with 
disabilities, or students who have disabilities don’t want to come 
forward.”
The mentors don’t need to be artists, as long as they just want to have fun and learn about their disability, Cara said.
“There is a need in K-12 education for students who have LD/ADHD to 
better understand their disabilities,” Kevin Fleming, community 
organizer for Eye to Eye, wrote in an email to the Collegian. “There is a
 need for these students to realize their strengths, and for them to see
 that a future in higher education is not only possible but probable.”
The CSU chapter is concentrating on students from Lincoln Middle 
School, because of the school’s minimal accessibility to resources for 
students with disabilities.
Due to Lincoln’s lower income demographics, there is no access to 
resources like iPads for assistive technology, audio formatted textbooks
 or text to speech programs for students. Without resources like those, 
students aren’t getting the help they need, The said.
“That is what we are here for,” The said. “We can help find resources
 for them, as well as acting like a mentor and helping them get to a 
place where they feel good about their disability. And that is why we 
give them resources, because everyone learns differently.”
The idea to bring Eye to Eye to CSU came from the Ability Club, an 
organization on campus that joins together students with disabilities.
“The Ability Club recognized the need to do more disability awareness
 outreach to K-12 education,” Fleming said. “Society stigmatizes all 
disabled people by problematizing them under the ‘cure’ model of 
disability. We want people with disabilities, especially kids in K-12 
education, to realize that they are not problems, but rather people who 
have unique sets of valuable experiences and skills.”
Aside from providing resources, the program aims to give both mentors
 and mentees alike a sense of community and pride. According to The, one
 of the results of the program is that students both in college and 
junior high gain a community of support that they may not have had 
before the program.
“It brings a community and a family here for support,” Cara said. 
“That feeling makes you really feel like you belong. We want everyone to
 be proud of their disabilities and identity.”
“It helps boost self-confidence and gives them a community to belong 
to,” The added. “It’s hard when you feel like you are the only one and 
this helps show them that there are older students and they can help 
find their greatest potential.”
According to the two coordinators, the best part about the program 
for them is seeing the impact on the community, and getting to see more 
people accept and embrace their disability.
“What is really cool about this program is that no one asks what the 
student needs to be able to learn,” Cara said. “They are just expected 
to follow the rules of culture and this is for them and their needs and 
disability.”
The Eye to Eye program is hosting an informational session Wednesday 
night at 6 p.m. in the Resources for Disabled Students Office.
Source: Collegian writer Taylor Pettaway 
 
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