Jump to content

User:BessWilliamson/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Professor of Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/School of the Art Institute of Chicago/American Design Culture in the 20th Century (Fall 2021)

Elaine Ostroff (February 27, 1933 - ) is a designer and educator based in Massachusetts. She contributed to the Universal Design movement and promoted inclusive design education in the United States.[1]

Early Life and Education[edit]

Ostroff was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, and graduated from Durfee High School in 1951.[2] She attended Brandeis University, receiving a Bachelors of Science in 1955. Later, she received a Radcliffe Fellowship in 1970, and received a Ed.M. degree from Harvard University.

Career[edit]

Ostroff served as Director of training for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health where she developed programs and courses supporting community-based living for disabled people. She was the U.S. representative to a United Nations meeting on the Rights of Children in 1977.[1]

In 1978 Ostroff co-founded, with Cora Beth Abel, of the Adaptive Environments Center, which specialized in creating access for people with disabilities.[1] The Center grew out of the Arts and Human Services Project, a multi-disciplinary graduate program at the Massachusetts College of Art that emphasized the role of artists and designers in creating inclusive spaces. Adaptive Environments was later re-named the Institute for Human Centered Design, which still operates in Boston.[3]

At Adaptive Environments, Ostroff became a part of a network of designers who contributed to the concept of Universal Design, or design that includes both disabled and non-disabled people without separation. She began a national seminar on "Design for All People" in 1982, which developed into the Universal Design Education Project (UDEP) in 1989.[1] She emphasized more creative approaches to accessibility than the basics of legal code requirements,[4] and foregrounded the role of disabled people themselves in design. She coined the term "user/expert" for people whose personal experiences qualified them to evaluate access in the built environment.[1]

Ostroff was present at the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act at the White House on July 26, 1990.

She also contributed to the Principles of Universal Design, along with collaborators Ronald L. Mace, Edward Steinfeld, Mike Jones, and Jim Mueller[4]. She promoted Universal Design as a method to teach in design schools, establishing the Universal Design Educators Network in 1998. Her educational advocacy work was recognized in the Misha Black Award from the Royal College of Art, which she was also the first American and first woman to receive.[5]

Books[edit]

Preiser, Wolfgang F. E., and Elaine Ostroff. Universal Design Handbook. McGraw-Hill Handbooks. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001.

Ostroff, Elaine. Building a World Fit for People: Designers with Disabilities at Work. Boston, MA: Adaptive Environments Center, 2002.

Ostroff, Elaine. Humanizing Environments: A Primer: The Most Facilitating Environments for Children, Their Teachers and Families. Cambridge, Mass: Produced by Word Guild for the Massachusetts Dept. of Mental Health, 1978.

  1. ^ a b c d e "Elaine Ostroff Universal Design Papers | Collection: NMAH.AC.1356". sova.si.edu. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  2. ^ Allard, Deborah. "Ostroff receives honorary degree at 85". Fall River Herald News. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  3. ^ "Mission | Institute for Human Centered Design". www.humancentereddesign.org. Retrieved 2024-02-02.
  4. ^ a b Hamraie, Aimi (2020). Building access: universal design and the politics of disability (Nachdruck ed.). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 206–207. ISBN 978-1-5179-0164-6.
  5. ^ "Misha Black Award to Ostroff". www.accessiblesociety.org. Retrieved 2024-02-02.