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Serendipity sparks a life-changing program

30 August 2024
A journey towards inclusion
When a unique program for students with intellectual disabilities was on the verge of closing, a chance connection ensured it could continue to transform lives.
Students and staff from the Uni 2 Beyond program seated on the front steps in front of the University of Sydney Quadrangle. They are smiling and posing for the photo.

Students and staff from the Centre for Disability Studies' program, Uni 2 Beyond, explore the campus in preparation for the new semester.

The Centre for Disability Studies (CDS), a not-for-profit organisation affiliated with the School of Health Sciences at the University of Sydney, is transforming social inclusion opportunities. Their award-winning program, Uni 2 Beyond (U2B), offers people with intellectual disabilities the chance to immerse themselves in university life 鈥 empowering them with new skills, relationships and life-long learning to achieve their dreams.

When discussing the JACE Foundation's partnership with the U2B program, the word "serendipity" often comes up. This remarkable program, which provides people with intellectual disabilities the opportunity to attend university classes over two years, had recently halted due to funding shortages. Everything changed when the JACE Foundation's founder, who wishes to remain anonymous, learned about the program and felt an instant connection. It quickly became a passion project, perfectly aligning with the foundation's core values.聽聽

Staff and students standing in a line in the classroom posing for a photo in front of a PowerPoint presentation. The slide on the screen reads 'Welcome Day - Uni 2 Beyond - Follow your dreams, never give up and have an absolutely fantastic experience' accompanied by a picture of two women smiling. The students and staff are smiling and look happy to be in the classroom

Students and staff and the CDS Welcome Day meeting.

鈥淚 said, 鈥榳ell, that's right up my alley of what JACE would support and love to support鈥,鈥 they say.

The reason why is deeply personal and has driven the JACE Foundation's choice of causes to support.聽

鈥淢y daughter is autistic. She was diagnosed when she was two,鈥 the founder says. 鈥淎nd recently her school said she was presenting more with intellectual disabilities and wouldn鈥檛 be able to access the standard high school program. She is now 13 and we鈥檝e moved her to a high school where they handle intellectual disabilities and have a modified course for them throughout school.鈥

This prompted the founder of the JACE Foundation to consider life for their daughter after school. What kind of programs were available for students with intellectual disabilities who wished to attend university? Surprisingly, there were very few.聽

鈥淭he [Uni 2 Beyond] program is one of only two programs like it in Australia though there are more internationally,鈥 says Mary-Ann O'Donovan, Associate Professor of Disability Studies and CEO of the CDS, who is based in the Susan Wakil Health Building at the University of Sydney.

Benny Dominish wearing a pale blue shirt with white flowers. He has short grey hair and is smiling at the camera. In the background, you can see the sandstone buildings of the University of Sydney.

Benny Dominish who participated in Uni 2 Beyond from 2018 to 2020 now works at the CDS as a social inclusion officer.

For Benny Dominish who was part of the program from 2018 to 2020, Uni 2 Beyond聽 paved the way to transform his passion into a career where he now enhances inclusion opportunities for others. 鈥淭his program will change your life dramatically,鈥 he says. He describes his time in the program as 鈥渟imply amazing.鈥

鈥淚 honestly I enjoyed it more than anything else, because I got to experience what it's like to actually be a uni student, to go to classes, do lectures and things of that nature.鈥

Dominish is now a social inclusion officer at the CDS. A role that gives him immense joy.聽

鈥淲orking here is just like, for me, the unexpected icing on the cake.鈥澛犅

鈥淲hat the program demonstrates, and what all other programs around the world demonstrate, is that people with intellectual disability have potential, they have capacity, desire and ambition and can achieve great things with the right structure, support and pathway. But we have to create the pathway. It's not happening naturally.鈥

As Associate Professor O鈥橠onovan explains, a lot of the time this pathway doesn鈥檛 exist because of the testing and examination criteria to get into university from high school, and then the rigours of assessments to complete university education.

As the Uni 2 Beyond program doesn't result in formal qualifications, participating in tests and assessments is optional. However, there are students who choose to take them. One such student, Bruce Eric O鈥橞rien, participated in the program in 2021 and 2022. O鈥橞rien, who dreamed of becoming a maths teacher while in school, enrolled in both Maths and German classes at the University, and completed assessments for German. Not surprisingly, German became his favourite subject during his time in the program.

The learning component is just one aspect, another vital part of the program is the social side.聽

鈥淥ne of the key things with the program is social connection,鈥 Associate Professor O鈥橠onovan says. 鈥淪o, we know people build their social connections in university, and that can then be your network for later on in life.鈥澛

The social aspect of university life stood out to Ellie Taylor, another U2B student, who mentions the lunches on campus as well as the discussions in class related to what they were learning. 鈥淲e would get into groups and talk about the subjects,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 wanted to experience uni, and do it independently with some help and support.鈥 聽

A brightly coloured artwork showing different curved shapes filling the space. There is a large peach-coloured curved shape filling the centre of the page - it looks almost like a person, or a wave. The background is divided in half into green and red blocks which are filled with smaller pink, yellow, turquoise and orange shapes.

Bridget Kelly, Swell,聽POSCA on paper, A2, 2022.
Find Bridget on Instagram -

And highlighting U2B鈥檚 achievements in the arts, U2B graduate, Bridget Kelly, advanced her visual arts education and exhibits in multiple Sydney galleries, securing a permanent fixture in Sydney鈥檚 inner-west. The benefits of the program are clear and are not exclusive to the students who participate in it but benefit society at large. As Associate Professor O鈥橠onovan mentions, 鈥渢he students benefit, but the teaching staff benefits, the rest of the student population benefits, the whole community benefits - there's so much of a ripple effect.鈥

And to the founder of the JACE Foundation, who stepped in at just the right moment, Dominish has one last thing to say: 鈥淭hank you, because without their help, this wouldn't be happening. And I probably wouldn't be able to have a job in such a beautiful place like this.鈥


Written by聽Saman Shad for the聽donor publication. Photography by Stefanie Zingsheim.