At 17, Gino Tubaro started transforming kids with disabilities into super heroes
At the age of 17, Gino Tubaro received a letter from a desperate mother. “Please make my boy, Felipe, a hand,” it said. “We cannot afford a prosthetic.” Gino had been inventing things since the age of 13. His own mother had taken him to science fairs and invention workshops, pushing him to follow...
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Peyton Klein: Creating a two-way stream of inclusion
When new immigrant and refugee students started coming to her school, Peyton Klein saw the possibility for mutual learning and support.
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Josh: Ensuring everyone is a player in Phoenix, Arizona
After meeting a friend’s brother who loved to play soccer but was excluded from the team because he has Down Syndrome, Josh became determined to find a way.
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Sarah: Fostering inclusive environments in schools
Sarah and her team did not just start a club, they started a movement - a movement to change how her peers think about and interact with students with intellectual disabilities.
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JP Maunes: putting accessibility and inclusion center stage in the Philippines
JP’s life’s work to change mindsets in Filipino society about disability inclusion started when he was a teenager, growing up in the central Visayas region of the Philippines.
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#LeadYoung - Temple Grandin:
“The thing about changing something is that it’s long, hard, sustained work.”