Arianna Peña

AccessAbility Services changes name to Disability Services

Photo by Tzav Harrel ’24.
Disability Services’ office is in Mary Lyon Hall.

By Arianna Peña ’25

Staff Writer

Content warning: This article mentions ableism.

What is the best way to serve and affirm disabled students on campus? This question has been posed by students, fellows and staff at the newly-named Disability Services office, some of whom hope that this name change alters the perspective of students across campus regarding the use of the word disability.

 On Sept. 1, 2022, the Disability Services team sent an email to students across campus with updates regarding office and staff email communication, staffing, drop-in hours, making appointments, note-taking and accommodations for the upcoming 2022-2023 school year. The first part of the email announced the recent name change of the office from AccessAbility Services to Disability Services. 

In the email, team members C. Ross, Emily Dean and Zemora Tevah addressed that “over the years, the office staff, students, staff and faculty raised questions about the office’s previous name, AccessAbility Services.” They continued by explaining that in Spring 2022, the office staff partnered with Dean of the College and Vice President for Student Success Amber Douglas and “engaged in conversations with students and campus partners about alternative names that reflected the work of the office and communicated [its] commitment to support students with disabilities on campus.”

As described on their website, “Disability Services works with students to provide reasonable accommodations for those that have documented disability, and/or disability-related needs.”

While the Disability Services office provides accommodations, assistive technology and support to students with documented disabilities or disability-related needs, as stated on their website, it also works to provide those who need accommodations for religious purposes.

Earl Wren ’24, a Disability Services fellow for the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 school years, was part of the name change process that began last year. “The name change was proposed by the 2021-2022 disability fellows and I believe I was actually the first fellow to mention it. We were able to fit the name change in at the second semester I believe, and focus groups were held in the same semester open to all students registered with the office … to express student opinions on what the new name should be,” Wren said.

Karis Knoll ’25 attended these focus groups. As someone who has used Disability Services since their first semester, they were very interested in the name change process. “We talked through why ‘AccessAbility’ as a phrase wasn’t a good phrase, because it insinuates … that a student who uses ‘AccessAbility’ services needed to access ability, that there was something inherently inferior about the student that they needed help accessing something,” Knoll said.

“They — wider society, not just MHC — are trying to say that disabled people can do just as much as non-disabled people, which [is] a statement that, on a surface level, sounds progressive but when you dig deep, it is rooted in ableism and disability erasure,” Wren said.

Knoll and Wren, who both identify as disabled, agree that ‘disabled’ should not be viewed as a bad word. “My many debilitating disabilities do limit what activities I can do and what kind of life I can live in, and that’s okay. Some people believe admitting disability equals admitting the disabled person is lesser, but that is not true — it only reflects the person and society’s attitude towards disability, not the inherent worth of the disabled person,” Wren said.

While some students have mentioned that the change in name may further isolate students who are disabled from students who are not, Grace MacIntyre ’25, a fellow for Disability Services, added that “words and phrases like ‘AccessAbility,’ ‘differently abled,’ ‘special,’ etc. further reinforce in people’s minds that disability is a bad word that should be avoided and, by extension, disabled people too. This is primarily for the comfort of abled people, who don’t want to actively interact with the complexity of disability,” MacIntyre said.

Wren and MacIntyre also explained that while the change to Disability Services reflects how the office staff seek to affirm disabled students, it was also changed for clarity and ease. Students seeking accommodations or support from the Disability Services will now have an easier time searching for the offices as the purposeful misspelling of “AccessAbility” often made it harder to find the office online, a sentiment shared by Wren, Knoll and MacIntyre. Wren added that when they were a newly accepted Mount Holyoke student, the title “AccessAbility Services” made them nervous and hesitant to reach out.

“I personally feel like Disability Services correctly communicates what the actual services are and helps students know where to go to get their disability needs met,” Knoll said.

Overall, Wren, Knoll and MacIntyre are happy with the name change, citing that they hope it sparks conversation among nondisabled students and the Mount Holyoke community at large about why disabled is not a negative word. MacIntyre adds that they “hope with this name change, disabled students feel more supported and understood and nondisabled students will start to learn more about the Disability Justice Movement.”

For any student who may feel like they need the services provided, Disability Services can currently be reached by email at disability-services@mtholyoke.edu or in their office on the third floor of Mary Lyon Hall, which their website states is wheelchair accessible through the entrance on the ground floor. Open hours are Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 1-2 p.m. while the College is in session.

A Timothée Chalamet and Mary Lyon love story comes to campus

Graphic by Lauren Leese ’23.

By Arianna Peña ’25

Staff Writer

At 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 21, a crowd of roughly 50 students gathered around Mary Lyon’s grave to witness a brand-new, one-time-only show, “Going Places I Shouldn’t be Going.” 

Performed by members of the Write Here, Write Now creative writing club, this satirical one-act followed ex-actor Timothée Chalamet as a new professor at Mount Holyoke College. After his career takes a drastic turn for the worse, Chalamet lectures at a college where he is mistreated and gawked at. There, he wonders why the school founder is buried on school grounds and why the Film, Media Theater department is led by the same woman who chairs the German studies major. Chalamet is then transported back in time by Jorge, who seeks to generally terrify and torture him, to the early days of Mount Holyoke, when Mary Lyon was still president. Now in the year 1847, Chalamet manages to show the young women of the seminary there is more to life than the Bible. Along the way, he falls in love with the College president. Eventually, Chalamet returns to the present day, heartbroken that he has been separated from his true love, but determined to carry on her legacy as a professor at the school. 

“I think this was born out of Zoom insanity,” Olivia Wilson ’24, the writer and director of “Going Places I Shouldn’t be Going,” said. “It was at the end of our second meeting on Zoom, I remember this very vividly, and we were talking about bad fan-fiction — as you do in a creative writing club — and we were playing this little game of ‘What is the worst thing we can come up with?’ And we landed on Timothée Chalamet and Mary Lyon.” 

“We kind of got to talking about it more and said, ‘Oh my god, wouldn’t it be so funny if we put on a play?’ … I remember saying, ‘I have directing experience and playwriting experience, so if you guys work with me to put it on, I will write it,’” Wilson said.

And they did. Wilson, along with many other members of the club, helped create the production. Everything, from the costumes to the live violin player to the various promotional posters plastered around campus, was done by members of Write Here, Write Now.

Lauren Leese ’23, co-president of Write Here, Write Now and the Narrator of “Going Places I Shouldn’t be Going,” is no stranger to building creative outlets for students. 

“[In] my freshman year, my friend Rebecca [Kilroy ’23] and I met each other at orientation and we went to the involvement fair to try and find writing-related clubs because we both loved creative writing. And there was Mount Holyoke News, I think at the time there was a poetry society, but there was no creative writing club. And so we said, ‘Well then, we’ll make one,’” Leese said.

While Leese and Kilroy — the other co-president and founder — tried to finalize the club’s official founding, their plans were derailed when the pandemic hit in 2020, and the club remained both small and unofficial for a year. However, in 2021 the current juniors were able to secure Student Government Association Ways and Means funding to make Write Here, Write Now an official club at the College. They aimed to give students who enjoy non-academic writing a space to write freely and creatively with no judgment and full support.

“When you’re in college, it’s really hard to write creatively, especially if you’re working on a long-term project or if you’re just trying to be consistent about it. That can make you feel really guilty, that you’re putting other things above your creative expression. So, we thought that having a set meeting time every week where we set a timer for 30 minutes and everybody [gets] to work on the creative project they couldn’t get to earlier in the week, that’s the kind of thing we think creative writers on this campus really need, so that’s what we want to provide,” Leese said.

“[That’s] the core of what we are, a place where people can write when they don’t have time the rest of the week,” Leese added.

While Write Here, Write Now seeks to give students the space that they need to write whatever they desire. Wilson believes there is something almost cathartic that comes with putting effort into something “bad.” 

“I find it really liberating … [writing] ‘bad’ fanfiction, and not caring about quality or the nitty-gritty and just being like ‘How can I tell this crazy story in 15 minutes? … How can I make people laugh [and] how can I torture my fellow board members?’” Wilson said.

Samantha Pittman ’23, who played Jorge, agreed that there is relief that comes with being creative simply for the sake of being creative. “It’s super easy [to be] dragged down by all the work you have to do [at the end of the semester,] but to have an hour or half an hour where you are just goofing off and doing this silly amazing fanfiction, … it was a great break mentally,” Pittman said.

While there are no promises that Write Here, Write Now will put on another Timothée Chalamet-themed production in the future, the leaders of the organization seek to support writers who have a passion to create.

Editor’s note: Olivia Wilson ’24 and Lauren Leese ’23 are members of Mount Holyoke News.