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Accessibility at Queen Mary

Advice for Queen Mary staff

Queen Mary staff are advised to look at two documents available on the Advice for QMUL staff section of the Disability and Dyslexia Service website for more information and guidance on creating accessible content:

These have been produced in collaboration with our colleagues in the Technology Enhanced Learning Teams.

SensusAccess

You can also use the SensusAccess digital conversion tool to upload documents and request them back in a format of your choosing. See our pages on how to convert a document and to access this facility, (NB: you will need a @qmul.ac.uk email address).

SensusAccess is a self-service, alternate media solution for educational institutions. SensusAccess allows students, faculty, staff and alumni to automatically convert documents into a range of alternate media including audio books (MP3 and DAISY), e-books (EPUB, EPUB3 and Mobi) and digital Braille.

If for any reason you are not satisfied with the response to your accessibility feedback, please refer to the enforcement procedure outlined in the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) Accessibility Regulations 2018.

Access guides

Queen Mary University of London has collaborated with the organisation AccessAble (formally DisabledGo) to create a comprehensive set of access guides for all the university's physical locations, covering all our campuses.

About AccessAble 

AccessAble state that they are there to “take the chance out of going out. To give you the detailed information you need to work out if a place is going to be accessible to you”, adding that their “Detailed Access Guides tell you all about a venue's access. They are 100% facts, figures and photographs.” (About AccessAble, 2019)

Their website hosts information on a wide range of venues and organisations across the UK – they currently work with many universities, including Imperial College London and King's College London. More locally, they have also worked with Tower Hamlets council and Barts and The London NHS Health Trust. The organisation was set up in 2000 as a result of their founder, Dr Gregory Burke's experiences and frustrations trying to access his local community as a wheelchair user. AccessAble is a Small and Medium-Sized Enterprise and is a not-for-profit social enterprise.  By 2018 DisabledGo (now AccessAble) was used by over 1.5 million people each year to plan a visit or trip out. Thousands of people continued to shape the service getting involved in DisabledGo's engagement events and social media channels, and they aim to build on this success, hoping to be helping 3 million people by 2020.

AccessAble access guides

The access guides are aimed at disabled people – both prospective applicants and current students, as well as disabled staff and visitors – and have been produced for the benefit of all disabled people, including those with mobility issues, sensory impairments (e.g. hearing impaired, visually impaired, blind and deaf people), as well as those with sensitivities to extraneous lighting and sound, e.g., autistic people.

Where to find the access guides

QMUL’s access guides are hosted on the AccessAble website, with links to QMUL's buildings and services being embedded onto QMUL's own webpages wherever appropriate. The relevant access guide for each campus, building and university service can be navigated to from this main page.

If you would like the content relating to your service area reviewed please contact the Disability and Dyslexia Service: dds@qmul.ac.uk.

Support for applicants and students

Queen Mary's Disability and Dyslexia Service (DDS) offers support for all students with disabilities, specific learning differences and mental health difficulties at Queen Mary from application through to graduation.

Our highly experienced team of staff offer advice, guidance and support in the following areas:

  • Finding out if you have a specific learning difference like dyslexia
  • Applying for funding through the Disabled Students' Allowance (DSA)
  • Arranging DSA assessments of need
  • Examination Access Arrangements
  • Accessing loaned equipment (eg, digital recorders)
  • Specialist one-to-one study skills tuition
  • Assistance with access to course materials in alternative formats (eg, Braille)
  • Providing non-specialist human support workers (eg, note-takers, lab assistants, readers)
  • Specialist mentoring support for students with mental health diagnoses and conditions on the autistic spectrum.

Support for staff

Queen Mary University of London is committed to creating an environment where disabled staff can achieve their full potential.

If you have any queries about support available for disabled staff, please contact the Diversity Team. Your queries will be dealt with in confidence.

Contact details

Disability and Dyslexia Service
Room FB 3.06, Francis Bancroft Building
Queen Mary University of London
Mile End Road
London
E1 4NS

T: +44 (0)20 7882 2756
F: +44 (0)20 7882 5223

E: dds@qmul.ac.uk

For more information, please visit the Disability and Dyslexia Service pages.

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