Outstanding grad inspired to give independence to others with disabilities through recreation
Editor's note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2020 graduates.
Rachel Dora-Ann Fisher never dreamed a disability that once interrupted her academic studies would lead to a fulfilling career helping others with similar challenges.
Fisher, a first-generation college student from Cicero, a Chicago suburb, is the spring 2020 outstanding graduate of the School of Community Resources and Development (SCRD).
Upon arriving in Arizona eight years ago, she found that her already low vision was decreasing severely. Fisher was unable to find a job, leading her to conclude that she couldn’t do the work she had learned how to do as a college student in Illinois.
She transitioned to the Phoenix-based Foundation for Blind Children’s vocational rehabilitation program for adults to retrain in assistive technology and skills with vision loss. She planned to get a job and applied for her first guide dog.
When a career counselor asked her about her favorite previous job, she described her work in the West Suburban Special Recreation Association.
“It was my favorite job. I got to work with others with disabilities and mainly young adults with autism. It was fulfilling work I cherished. I kept a picture of one of my students from the program,” said Fisher.
“The ‘aha’ moment was when (the career counselor) told me it was recreational therapy I was doing, and that I could go to ASU to get a degree in the field. I knew at that moment it was what I was meant to do: to help give freedom and independence to other people with disabilities through recreation.”
ASU instructors were kind and understanding regarding her disability and helped arrange accommodations for her, which was key to her being able to be successful, she said.
Question: What’s something you learned while at ASU — in the classroom or otherwise — that surprised you, that changed your perspective?
Answer: I was surprised at how my professors and teachers cared about me as a person and as a student. I had a previous experience in a college in … Chicago where… (instructors told me) I would not get hired being visually impaired, and I only made it halfway through my senior year. The experience was horrific, and I thought I would never try to attend college ever again. Once the opportunity arose for me to go back to school and study recreational therapy at ASU, I was very timid and scared of what it would be like, (because) my previous teachers were not kind about my disability. The first semester here, my instructors were so kind and understanding and didn’t really see my visual impairment as a limitation to my abilities; they just saw it as the reason I needed some accommodations. I was treated like a whole person. I was so happy and surprised at how different my entire college experience has been, and their support and kindness has made me the student I am and given me the confidence to make change and be the person I want to be.
Q: Why did you choose ASU?
A: It was the absolute best school to get my recreational therapy degree and on the downtown campus. Once I visited downtown, it gave me that city feel I missed from back in Chicago, but so relaxed. I had interviewed for an essay with (SCRD faculty associate) Beth Dietrich, and loved her perspective and knew she was going to be one of my instructors. All the working professionals in my field had come from ASU, so I knew where I wanted to go!
Q: Which professor(s) taught you the most important lesson while at ASU?
A: There is a TED Talk where a teacher explains what a lollipop moment is. It's when you do something that greatly impacts another person’s life without even knowing it. Kelly Ramella (an SCRD associate instructional professional and program coordinator) impacted my life in the first semester at ASU.
The first time I met her face to face, I was in her online class and struggling with making it accessible. We met to discuss it near the elevators in UCENT (University Center on the Downtown Phoenix campus). She looked at me and said, “We are going to figure out how to make you the best recreational therapist with your disability.”
It was the first time I had ever in my life had a teacher tell me that my disability could make me better in my field, that it could work for me and not against me. Over the past two years, she has continued to do just that and show me so many ways to be who I am: a recreational therapist who happens to also be visually impaired.
Q: What’s the best piece of advice you’d give to those still in school?
A: To get involved, don’t sit back, make this the college experience you have always wanted. I can say in my experiences here at ASU in student organizations, student leadership positions, working on campus, and in my classes and volunteer work I have done more than I ever imagined I could.
My first semester, I was very shy and reserved and talked to very few people. It was getting involved in my first student organization, fighting for a streetlight near Arizona Center, and getting a campus job. I then started to work in advocacy more and have never looked back.
Don’t let anything hold you back, whether it’s income, being first-generation, being a parent, having a disability, being from out of state or out of the country, transferring here, or just thinking you can't make change. I have helped to make change and I am an adult transfer student, first-generation, single mom, low income, from out of state, and none of those labels mattered. You are seen by your fellow students as an ASU student. This is your family! You are surrounded by supportive, loving and intelligent students from around the globe and varying backgrounds. You can make anything possible.
Q: As an on-campus student, what was your favorite spot to study or to just think about life?
A: I love to sit right in front of UCENT and my service/guide dog Austin sits right up there with me. Under the trees in the shade and looking at Civic Space park across the street.
I also enjoy sitting in front of Starbucks with Austin in the shade, me with a coffee or tea and him with his puppuccino.
Q: If someone gave you $40 million to solve one problem on our planet, what would you tackle?
A: I would create better programming with recreational therapy for students transitioning with disabilities from high school to college or work. So many students with disabilities become lost from high school to college without support or assistance. I was one of those students. I was told I would only be a telemarketer because that’s all someone with blindness in my low economic bracket could do. (Instead) I would get to go to college and better myself. This is exactly what these students are hearing as well.
I am applying to my master’s program to aid in this issue in Maryvale, where many students have no support from high school to college or work. We need to help our next generation to be happy, healthy and independent individuals, increasing their quality of life with support and programs for not just training on social skills, but career skills, and leisure education.
I may not have $40 million, but I will find a way to make it happen and be a changemaker.
More Arts, humanities and education
ASU workshop trains educators, professionals from marginalized communities in disaster science
As devastating as hurricanes can be to anyone caught in their paths, they strike marginalized communities even harder.To address…
ASU’s Humanities Institute announces 2024 book award winner
Arizona State University’s Humanities Institute (HI) has announced “The Long Land War: The Global Struggle for…
Retired admiral who spent decades in public service pursuing a degree in social work at ASU
Editor’s note: This story is part of coverage of ASU’s annual Salute to Service.Cari Thomas wore the uniform of the U.S. Coast…