Conference Promotes Leadership to Students with Disabilities

Josh Turbiak

Dare to Dream Student Leadership Conference keynote speaker Josh Turbiak speaks to students in the Campus Center Theatre.

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 About 250 high school students with disabilities from throughout southern New Jersey attended the 16th annual Dare to Dream Student Leadership Conference on campus on May 28.

Anthony Thomas

Anthony Thomas, the director of the Learning Access Program at Stockton, addresses the audience.

Stockton鈥檚 Learning Access Program (LAP), in collaboration with the state Department of Education鈥檚 Office of Special Education, presented the conference, which featured presentations from accomplished students and adults with disabilities who have demonstrated exemplary self-advocacy and leadership skills, said LAP Director Anthony Thomas.

鈥淭he conference program also included a variety of breakout sessions that provided attendees with opportunities to gain insight into the transition planning process for a successful future,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淗igh school students also participated in workshops led by their peers who are developing their own leadership skills.鈥

Some of the breakout sessions included 鈥淪tudent-Centered IEP (Individualized Education Program) Prep鈥 and 鈥淲ork Readiness Jeopardy: Getting and Keeping a Job.鈥 The students also listened to a keynote speech by Josh Turbiak, a critical care transport nurse/paramedic/educator in North Jersey who has attended several previous Dare to Dream Student Leadership Conferences. Turbiak graduated from Seton Hall University in 2019 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Nursing and is currently enrolled in Seton Hall鈥檚 Nurse Practitioner program.

One of the student keynote speakers was Emily Muldowney, a Southern Regional High School sophomore who has Tourette Syndrome. She spoke to the audience about her struggles with the disorder, which causes her to have involuntary tics, repetitive movements or vocal cursing 鈥渓ike an itch you just can鈥檛 scratch.鈥

鈥淚t is something I absolutely cannot control and learning to navigate the world with it has taught me everything I know about finding my own voice,鈥 she said.

Emily Muldowney

Emily Muldowney, a sophomore at Southern Regional High School who has Tourette's Syndrome, told the audience to be 'your own biggest cheerleader.'

But she said the most difficult part of having the disorder isn鈥檛 its symptoms, it鈥檚 how other people react to them.

鈥淚n school, I鈥檝e had to face a lot of bullying. I鈥檝e been called weird, and I鈥檝e even had people ask me if there鈥檚 a demon inside of me,鈥 she said. 鈥淔or a long time, those cruel words just made me want to stay quiet, hide away and try to blend in. But I quickly realized that staying quiet doesn鈥檛 help the world understand, and it doesn鈥檛 help me grow.鈥

She had to learn how to advocate and stand up for herself, explain her needs and hold her head up high even when people were unkind.

鈥淥nce I started to find my voice, the power shifted,鈥 she said.

Now, she wants to become an advocate for those who have Tourette鈥檚 and use her love of animals to go to college and become a veterinarian. She has become an accomplished public speaker and has testified in front of state legislators on behalf of the New Jersey Center for Tourette Syndrome and Associated Disorders.

鈥淚f I could just leave you with one piece of advice today 鈥 be your own biggest cheerleader. Never let someone else鈥檚 ignorance define who you are, and don鈥檛 be afraid to ask for the tools, time or the understanding you need to succeed,鈥 she said.

The Learning Access Program is Stockton鈥檚 disability support services office. Its role is to educate, advocate and facilitate equal access while maintaining a welcoming, inclusive and accessible campus community. The program engages in an interactive process with each student to determine appropriate accommodations on an individualized case-by-case, class-by-class basis. For more information, call 609-652-4988 or email lap@stockton.edu.

-- Story by Mark Melhorn, photos by Susan Allen