American Circus Educators Magazine Winter 2018 (Issue 3, Volume 14) | Page 34

EDCON 2018: ACCESSIBILITY The KIT website includes many excellent downloadable/ printable resources about inclusion, access, and the ADA; many are free. I strongly encourage every studio owner and circus educator to look at the website, in particular the Inclusion Checklist for Programs and the document Gathering Information from Families. In general, KIT advises us to not hyperfocus on a student’s diagnosis, but to focus on what a student needs to be able to fully participate. We will only know if we ask and if we figure it out together. Additionally, it is important to remember that success and access may look different for different people. Access and inclusion does not have to necessarily mean integration – what’s important is being able to participate as fully as possible in the activity, and if the most appropriate accommodations mean designing a special environment, then you can do that. Students who don’t require those accommodations can be invited to participate in that class too! In terms of diagnoses requiring special attention, one condition that seems to be especially prevalent in our circus community is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (and other hypermobility syndromes). It seems there are many aerialists and contortionists in particular who may have one of these syndromes and who are at risk of injury if they work with a circus coach who is not knowledgeable about these conditions and injury prevention. One of my goals is to work with circus performers, students, and educators who have these syndromes, and with healthcare practitioners who specialize in treating them, in order to develop safe and effective protocols for how circus educators can work with these students towards their circus goals without putting them at risk. A much less common condition among our students, but one with significant potential risk, is Down syndrome. Because of the hypermobility and ligamentous laxity that is common among people with this diagnosis, particularly at the joints where the skull joins the neck, there are some circus activities (i.e. gymnastics and trampoline) that should be performed with care or not performed at all until the student has been medically screened. I am currently working with healthcare practitioners, researchers, and disability advocates to develop a protocol for circus educators and students with Down syndrome, and I hope to have this available to the circus community in the next couple of months. In the meantime, the “short version” is that as of this printing, both the Special Olympics and Disability Gymnastics (U.K.) require medical screening of any athlete with Down syndrome prior to their participating in gymnastics. At this time, the specific recommendations for screening differ, but it is worthwhile for circus programs to be aware of this general practice. If you need to make a quick adaptation for a student whose medical status is 34 unknown, but who may have significant hypermobility for any reason, the movements of greatest concern according to the research are increased cervical hyperflexion/extension and pressure on the neck/ upper spine. So students can participate fully in every circus activity, but should specifically avoid trampoline back drops, and forward and backward rolls, until the student’s safety to participate has been determined. That being said, there are high-level gymnasts, circus performers, and other athletes with Down syndrome, hypermobility syndromes, and other "differences" all over the world, so this is a precaution, not a barrier. Carrie Heller, of the Circus Arts Institute, offers three levels of training in Circus Arts Therapy for using circus arts therapeutically with a variety of populations, and has been doing this work for 30 years. Erin Ball of Kingston Circus Arts - pictured in this article - has a teacher training manual called “Flying Footless,” and provides workshops and consultations. Her work originally focused specifically on teaching aerial skills to lower limb amputees, but has since expanded to accessibility and teaching methodology for the disabled/ adaptive community in general. These are the only formal trainings/workshops I’m aware of in the U.S./ Canada; it is also useful to reach out to experienced colleagues, some of whom are listed at the end of this article. For more, watch the video "Erin Ball - 2018 Creator Award." (This video is included here with permission from Make Hay Media). My goal is to help as many of our studios, schools, and programs move towards accessibility and inclusion as safely and comfortably as possible. That does not mean that anyone should fake knowledge and confidence that they do not have. If you have a student come in with a disability and you are unsure how to safely teach that student the skills they want to learn, by all means, PAUSE. Talk with the student (or with their family, if they’re a minor). Educate yourself about that particular student’s strengths, weaknesses, needs, limitations, interests, and especially their goals. While it may be useful to learn as much as you can about their diagnosis/ condition/disability in general, it may not be pertinent to their individual presentation, so it’s always important to communicate with the individual directly and learn about their specific experience. If you aren’t sure about something, be honest. You can work together with the student to see what’s possible. We often feel it’s important to protect our authority as instructors and educators, but that can cause us to bluff knowledge that we don’t have in a way that can actually cause harm to a student. Most educators are legitimately concerned about ensuring that our students and staff are safe, so we need to educate ourselves, reach out to others with more knowledge and experience, and continue to move forward for the benefit of all members of our community. 35