So, my name is Michelle Nario Redmond. I am a social psychologist and I teach at (Hiram?) College. in the psychology and biomedical humanities program, and I just wrote a book on ableism, the causes and consequences of disability prejudice. My first memory, and I'll just back up and say 1990, when the ADA passed I was in graduate school, in Kansas, and disability prejudice, the ADA or anything related to disability issues was completely off my radar, and I worked at a place where one of the pioneers of disability studies worked, Beatrice Wright, and I had yet to have a class with her. It really wasn't until 1995, which was five years later, when my daughter was born, Sierra was (anabifoda??), which is when I became aware of disability and found the work of Carol Gill and (Simi Litton?) and began to educate myself on disability studies and its scope, and the first memory I have of confronting inaccessible spaces was a few years later, when we enrolled my daughter Sierra in a preschool, at a Catholic preschool, right down the road; and it just didn't even dawn on me that we would have to work so hard for her to be accommodated as a preschooler, and it was really a (function?) of the fact that the building was older, there were steps, and they really didn't know, nor did they need to legally know, about reasonable accommodations and civil rights of their students, because they were a private facility and weren't subject to the ADA's rules. So it became clear to me that we needed to find a new preschool, and luckily we found another private place - it wasn't a public school - but it was a music school settlement and they had resources and they were already operating under a sort of set of presumptions about the value of diversity and diverse perspectives, and we didn't really have to ask for much, because they bent over backwards to include my daughter in a typical classroom, with her peers, her preschool peers, music classes, there were so many eclectic-- movement classes, and they even purchased equipment for their exercise room and movement room that would be useful to her among others, and she has since grown up to become this teacher and has applied to work there as a preschool teacher, so I think it would be really amazing if she came full circle, but I guess to answer the broader question about being frustrated and aware of inaccessibility and lack of inclusion, we were in a district that, when she then was about to move to preschool, I knew that she probably wouldn't be able to go to a private school, not only because of the financial cost but also because they would not have to think about best practices and the law when it came to accommodating their students with disabilities, and so I knew we would be looking at the public school, and the public school in our neigbourhood was not accessible. We went to visit it, the playground had a little house that she wouldn't have been able to get into, and it was really disheartening and so it came at a time when we were already looking for other opportunities, and my husband got an opportunity to move us as a family to the West Coast in Portland of Oregon, so the way I-- so the way we had to navigate her early educational experiences was to only look at spaces and schools that were in districts that were new, so that had buildings and had training in terms of accommodating their diverse students and their disabled students, because just having the brief experiences that I did with the preschool and IEP meetings that were going to require me to fight at every juncture for her basic rights to show what she knows and participate and recognise herself as a valuable contributor to the school community, we're not going to be forthcoming without a fight, and so we narrowed our search to a district, and thank God we had an opportunity and the resources to do this, that was