Design and Art

The nature of artwork, design, studio, and performance activities pose unique challenges, yet also provide creative opportunities for students with a range of visual, hearing, health, psychiatric, mobility, and learning impairments. With appropriate accommodations, students with disabilities can access visual, performing, literary, media, and design arts.

Students require access to three major aspects of the arts. They need to be able to access the physical environment or location of the activity (e.g., studios, theaters, museums). They also need to access and participate in the activities (e.g., drawing, dancing, composing, filming). Finally, they need to be able to access products (e.g., video presentations, plays, musical performances). Accommodations for design and art vary greatly and depend on the individual's needs and the activity, event, or product. For example, students with hearing impairments may need amplification, captioning, or sign language interpreters to access music, films, or live performances. Some students with mobility impairments need accessible seating in performance halls and theaters, while others need adaptive equipment to manage tools and materials. Students with visual impairments may need printed material such as scripts, sheet music, and literature in large print or Braille. Students are the best source of information about their specific needs.

General suggestions for instructors to make design and art classes more accessible for students with disabilities include:

  • creating work environments that are wheelchair accessible (e.g., adjustable workstations, spaces that are free of clutter, tools and supplies stored within reach)
  • allowing students extra time and/or assistance to set up materials
  • being flexible in assignment requirements and deadlines

Accommodations for Specific Disabilities

Blindness

Students who are blind cannot see visual aids; visual, media, and design arts; music notation; demonstrations; or performances. Design and art class accommodations for students who are blind may include:

  • descriptive interpreters who provide detailed descriptions of visual information
  • Brailled materials (e.g., musical notation, scripts, and assignment instructions)
  • extended assignment deadlines
  • clear verbal descriptions of visual aids, graphics, and instructions
  • raised-line drawings, tactile diagrams, or models

Health Impairments 

Students with various health conditions may have difficulty attending class regularly. They may fatigue easily. Medication side effects may impact endurance, memory, and attention. Students with chemical sensitivities may have difficulty with some types of art supplies and materials. Design and art class accommodations for students with health impairments may include: 

  • flexible attendance requirements 
  • extended assignment deadlines 
  • alternative assignments 

Hearing Impairments 

Students who are hard of hearing have difficulty receiving auditory information and may require amplification to hear music or voice. Students who are deaf may need to lip read or use a sign language interpreter. It is important to remember that students with hearing impairments who use an interpreter, lip read or read from a script often find it difficult to simultaneously watch demonstrations, attend to visual details, or follow verbal descriptions. Specific design and art class accommodations for students with hearing impairments may include: 

  • sign language interpreters 
  • real-time captioning 
  • captioned video presentations 
  • sound amplification systems. 
  • preferential seating for optimal listening or lip reading 
  • providing essential information in written format before the assignment begins (e.g., directions, scripts) 
  • extra viewing time for demonstrations or visual aids and descriptions 

Learning Disabilities 

Some students with learning disabilities have difficulty processing, organizing, and remembering large amounts of information. Completing extensive projects, such as portfolios, may also be challenging due to poor organizational or time management skills. Design and art class accommodations for students with learning disabilities may include: 

  • extended assignment deadlines 
  • extended time on exams 
  • adaptive computer hardware or software to assist with writing, reading, and organization 

Low Vision

Students with low vision may have difficulty seeing visual aids; visual, media, and design arts; handouts, demonstrations, and performances. Design and art class accommodations for students with low vision may include:

  • documentation (e.g., plan drawings, musical notation, scripts, assignment instructions) in large print • preferential seating for demonstrations or performances
  • extended assignment deadlines
  • clear verbal descriptions of visual aids, graphics, and instructions
  • adequate lighting in work spaces
  • large monitors and/or screen enlargers

Mobility Impairments

Physical access to art facilities or equipment may be challenging for a student with a mobility impairment. Students with limited hand use may also have difficulty handling art tools and equipment. Students may need to access some of the following art facilities and equipment: stages and dressing rooms, museums, visual art equipment, cameras, darkroom materials, easels, art supplies, drafting tables, and looms. Design and art class accommodations for students with mobility impairments may include:

  • adaptive tools and equipment
  • accessible field-based learning
  • alternative assignments
  • assistance with material set-up and preparation (e.g., wedging clay, stretching canvas)
  • a workstation for a student in a wheelchair with a work surface 30 inches from the floor, a 29-inch clearance beneath the work surface to a depth of at least 20 inches, a minimum width of 36 inches to allow leg space for the seated individual, and a clear aisle width of 42 to 48 inches
  • uncluttered workspace
  • adjustable workstations
  • preferential seating to avoid obstacles and physical classroom barriers and that provides visual access to demonstrations
  • mirrors above the instructor or enlarged screen demonstrations
  • alternative workspaces such as pullout or drop-leaf shelves and counter tops, or lap-desks
  • alternate storage methods (e.g., a portable Lazy Susan or a storage cabinet on casters)
  • accommodations to complete assignments using a computer
  • accommodations to transport large drawings or other work

Psychiatric Impairments

Students with various psychiatric conditions may have difficulty attending class regularly. They may fatigue easily or have difficulty completing extensive, long-term projects. Medication side effects may impact endurance, memory, and attention. Artwork accommodations for students with health impairments may include:

  • flexible attendance requirements
  • extended assignment deadlines
  • alternative assignments
  • quiet work areas or meeting areas where noise and other distractions are minimized

Check Your Understanding

How could you help a student in your your design or art class, who has low vision, access a Photoshop program? Choose a response.

  1. Provide screen enlargement software and a large-screen computer monitor.
  2. Have the student work with a partner.
  3. Use detailed verbal descriptions during instruction.
  4. Suggest that the student take a different course. 

Responses:

  1. Provide screen enlargement software and a large-screen computer monitor.
    Screen enlargement software and a large-screen monitor would help the student access the software.
  2. Have the student work with a partner.
    This may be a reasonable accommodation, depending on the needs of the student and the essential course requirements. The student with a disability should be involved and participate in other aspects of the work as much as possible.
  3. Use detailed verbal descriptions during instruction.
    This accommodation is important to give the student a visual orientation to the material. For example an instruction such as, "Click on the bottom right corner and drag toward the object in the middle of the screen" rather than, "Click here." provides more direction for the student who may not be able to adequately see the monitor.
  4. Suggest that the student take a different course.
    This would not be an appropriate recommendation. The student, instructor, and disabled students services staff should work together to first determine what reasonable accommodations are available to access the course.

More Information

Explore DO-IT Publications, Knowledge Base articles, and websites on this topic at Accommodation Resources: Design and Art. To learn about accommodations for a specific disability, select from the list below.