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Bio – Fellow – Past Fellows

Jolie Carr, Communications Fellow

National Leadership Program, Summer 2019

Jolie Carr smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Jolie Carr

Jolie Carr was a Communications Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for people with disabilities. 

A native of Houston, Carr is a senior at Samford University in Birmingham, where she is pursuing a major in communication studies and a minor in psychology. She joined the RespectAbility team because she has a passion for helping others, specifically those in the disabled community. Carr grew up around family members with disabilities and witnessed firsthand that disabilities are not necessarily restrictive, but rather are an important part of what makes someone positively unique. 

On campus, Carr is president of TEDxSamfordU, an organization that hosts TED talk-style events. She is passionate about change and innovation, and this passion emerges through TEDx, where she helps to plan events and select speakers who can challenge the thinking of the student body. 

Carr is also the vice president of community relations for Samford’s chapter of the women’s fraternity Delta Delta Delta. In this position, she oversees all public relations, marketing, social events, and philanthropy endeavors for her chapter. A major reason she chose to join Delta Delta Delta was its philanthropy, St. Jude, which helps to treat and support children with cancer and other life-threatening diseases. She is extremely passionate about this organization and loves having the opportunity to help sick children and their families. 

In her free time, Carr can almost always be found with people. She enjoys spending time with friends in a variety of ways: hiking, trying new food, exploring new places, going to museums, or watching movies together at home. If she’s not socializing, she can most likely be found with a book in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other.

Carr wrote two pieces during the 2019 Summer Fellowship. Read them on our website:

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Nemo Charlton, Policy Fellow

National Leadership Program, Summer 2019

Nemo Charlton smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Nemo Charlton

Nemo Charlton was a Policy Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program for Summer 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for people with disabilities. Charlton graduated from University of Maryland, College Park in Spring 2019 as a sociology major with a minor in history.

Charlton’s interest in disability advocacy as well as social justice stems in part from having autism. Given their experiences with special education and services, Charlton has become well connected to the disabled community. These networks have enabled Charlton to better understand and support people with disabilities.

Charlton worked as a summer camp counselor with many children with disabilities from low-income families. Charlton also has a background in activism. At the University of Maryland, they advocated for Title IX funding, which prohibits sexual discrimination in federally funded education programs, through coalition building and a social media campaign.

Charlton’s long-term goal is to find the best niche within the nonprofit field from which to positively make a difference in the world and to achieve personal fulfillment. They hoped to acquire applicable writing and networking skills through this extremely valuable program and learn more about nonprofits in the area of disability rights.

Charlton has a great interest in religious studies and classical history. Charlton is also an experienced dancer and likes to dance in an improvisational style.

Charlton wrote two pieces during the 2019 Summer Fellowship and contributed to a Maryland press release. Read them on our website:

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Michelle Adams, Communications Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Michelle Adams smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Michelle Adams

Michelle Adams was a Communications Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for and with people with disabilities. She worked on outreach to members of Congress and political candidates about the importance of inclusion of people with disabilities. She also worked to improve disability inclusion and perception in the Jewish Community.

As of 2019, Adams was a senior at George Washington (GW) University where she majors in Organizational Science and minors in Philosophy. Organizational Sciences ties managerial and executive success to the integration of knowledge in three key areas: Strategy & Change Management, Communication and Leadership, and Performance and Talent Development. On campus, she was the Vice President of the American Marketing Association GWU chapter and played on the GW Women’s club volleyball team.

Adams combines her experiences working in both the entertainment Industry at “We are The Mighty” and her political activism. In high school she worked on a California Gubernatorial race organizing youth volunteers and interning for her state party political office. Both experiences have armed her with the knowledge and skills to be an effective advocate for and with people with disabilities. Advocating for the advancement of diversity and disability issues is woven into the fabric of her identity and that is why she was an Fellow at RepectAbility.

Her personal experiences with learning disabilities and educational history mark her motivation for advocacy and awareness to facilitate better understanding of the disability experiences. Observing the large discrepancy between the understanding and awareness of disability and the social stigmas against people with disabilities has fueled her motivation for advocacy and political outreach. Understanding the manifestation of stigmas on policy, opportunity and culture are points of particular interest for Adams.

She was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. She witnessed firsthand the evolution within the entertainment industry and its slow response to include the more than one in five Americans with disabilities. All individuals can learn more about the issues facing the disability community simply by being informed and listening to a new narrative. Adams hopes to hone her skills at RespectAbility to reshape reality by reshaping the language and stories about individuals with all kinds of disabilities.

In her free time, Adams often can be found in nature. She enjoys hiking, surfing and playing most sports. She also enjoys music, dancing and comedy. Her adventurous spirit has found its home in her love for travel. Adams has traveled to almost 30 countries and hopes to continue to explore the beauty of our world.

Adams wrote one piece during the Spring 2019 Fellowship. Check it out on our website:

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Tatiana Lee, Communications Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Tatiana Lee smiling outside in a parking lot.

Tatiana Lee

Tatiana Lee was a Communications Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program for Spring 2019, and was subsequently RespectAbility’s Senior Associate of Entertainment Media. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for and with people with disabilities. Lee came to this leadership program to gain better knowledge and skills to be a more effective advocate in Hollywood for disability inclusion. She wants to learn about RespectAbility’s culture to maintain the excellent track record for effectiveness it has in Hollywood. She hopes to help represent RespectAbility in Hollywood. Like RespectAbility, Lee has dedicated her life to fighting for inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of mass media.
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Candace Cable, Policy Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Candace Cable smiling

Candace Cable

Candace Cable was a Public Policy/Employment Fellow in RespectAbilitys National Leadership Program for Spring of 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for and with people with disabilities. Cables involvement in sports after a spinal cord injury in 1975 at the age of 21 gave her renewed health, the ability to socially re-engage and a purpose in life. After her 27-year Paralympic athletic career, she uses this platform to effect positive global cohesive change for people with disabilities through her disability education training, consulting, writing, volunteering and speaking.

She is a nine-time Paralympian who competed in three sports: wheelchair racing, alpine and nordic ski racing. Cable won 12 medals and became the first American woman to medal in both Summer and Winter Paralympics in 1992. She also had the opportunity to compete on an Olympic stage, when wheelchair racing was an exhibition event, in three Summer Olympic Games, 84, 88, 92 and won two bronze medals.

Cable made major contributions to the evolution of the racing wheelchairs now used for track and road races all over the world, in distances from 100 meters to the Marathon 26.2 miles. She won 84 running marathons as a wheelchair road racer, including six Boston Marathons. In 2000 she joined the Outward Bound Girls on the Move project riding her handcycle 3,865 miles in three months, across the country, and stopping in 1500 communities to support girls and women to make healthy choices and be physically active.

Upon retirement from her sports career in 2006, she began sharing personal stories and designing programs to create an understanding of disability as a human life experience with Social Cohesion Resources. She co-founded Social Cohesion Resources to design Understanding Disability programs and trainings for non-disabled people to build empathy for the experience of disability. Instructors with disabilities share personal stories interwoven in the trainings. These trainings bring to light the truth that disability is human life experience we all will have, and there is nothing to fear. 

Her freelance writing includes not only Understanding Disability but also a lifestyle blog, contributing to the U.S. Adaptive Nordic Skiing instruction manual, the UNICEF Inclusive Education booklet, covering the Paralympic Games, as well as for various media outlets.

Her other work includes gigs as a webcast host, video producer and Human Rights representative to the United Nations for the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability. Cable has worked with the Christopher and Dana Reeves Foundation, Open Doors Organization, and with the U.S. State Department in its Speaker/Specialist program. One of her great successes is serving as the Director of Paralympic and Disability Engagement and Vice Chair for the LA2028 commissions successful bid to bring the Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games to Los Angeles. 

Her volunteer work includes UNICEFs inclusive education task force, Vice President of US International Council on Disability (USICD), the Southern California Olympian and Paralympian Association (SCOPA), and the US Olympian and Paralympian Association (USOPA). She was an Athlete Services Coordinator for the 2010 Winter Paralympic games and in 2012-2016 served on the United States Olympic Committees Athlete Advisory Council.

Cable is grateful she grew up playing outdoors with her two sisters, her brother and neighborhood friends. Her desire for fun and adventure kindled with family and friends has been a compass when choosing a direction for her life. Its true her spinal cord injury was not a choice, but what she did after that has continued to include fun and adventure. Her love of learning keeps her listening to podcasts, reading and engaging in stimulating conversations and relationships. She gave up cooking and gardening to spend time seeking out well-prepared meals and exploring public gardens.

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Ariella Z. Barker, Communications Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Ariella Barker in front of a tree and bushes. Ariella is a wheelchair user

Ariella Z. Barker

In addition to being an attorney, writer and disability activist, Ariella Z. Barker was a Political Communications Fellow in RespectAbilitys National Leadership Program for Spring 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for people with disabilities. She communicates with and reports on political campaigns for the President of the United States, Congress and Gubernatorial races regarding disability issues. She also works to improve disability inclusion and perception in the Jewish Community. 

Barker was diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy at the age of three and lost the ability to walk at the age of eleven, the same year the Americans with Disabilities Act went into effect. Living in an inaccessible world as a wheelchair-user, she quickly became a disability advocate to accomplish her own American Dream. From her public-school system and small hometown, her university and law school, to NYC courthouses and Israeli coffee houses, she paved an accessible path to the future.

Barker obtained her bachelors degree in Business and Administration from Emorys Goizueta Business School in 2002, with a nearly full merit scholarship from Bank of America. In 2005, she received her Law Degree from Emory University, as a Willard DeWitt Scholar. And, this summer, she begins her Mid-Career Masters in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School. 

After law school, Barker was an Assistant Corporation Counsel for the City of New York and Mayor Michael Bloomberg, where she defended high-profile constitutional, employment discrimination and labor law claims. As a result of her work, policy within the City changed. The NYPD began randomly drug testing officers for illegal steroids; city-run prisons were made more accessible; disabled employees requesting an accommodation were allowed alternative criteria for advancement; the NYPD issued a policy prohibiting officers from parking vehicles on sidewalks or curb-cuts, obstructing accessible pathways; and NY state courthouses became more accessible. 

In 2008, Barker emigrated to Israel. She continued working as an attorney, while advocating for Israelis with disabilities to have a more accessible state. She sat on accessibility committees, wrote op-eds for the Jerusalem Post, and encouraged various entities to make their properties accessible. As a result of her advocacy, many private businesses, synagogues and government properties became accessible. And in 2011, she was named one of Israels top 50 bachelorettes.

In 2012, Barker returned to the States for medical treatment and family support due to the onset of chronic illness. In battling chronic illness compounded with disability, she learned how impossible it is for Americans with severe or multiple disabilities to access healthcare, gain employment or simply live with dignity. It was this realization that convinced her to leave the practice of law and enter the world of disability policy. 

In 2014, Barker was crowned Ms. Wheelchair North Carolina, a disability advocacy position. As part of her role as Ms. Wheelchair NC, she encouraged producers and major television networks to accurately depict characters with disabilities on television and film. Since then, she has traveled the country, speaking about disability inclusion and rights. In 2016, she began advising politicians on disability issues. And she has published articles on disability issues in The Charlotte Observer, The Jerusalem Post, Garnet News, Push Living, Daily Kos, Grok Nation, Kol HaBirah, The Mighty and others.

Barker is the child of an immigrant and a first-generation college graduate. She grew up in rural North Carolina, but she has lived in Atlanta, New York City, and even oversees in Nigeria and Israel. She carried the 1996 Paralympic Torch, modeled for Permobil and has been the subject of several documentaries and news articles. 

Barker once played flute for the Charlotte Youth Symphony, going on to be first chair flute for the Emory University Wind Ensemble. While she no longer plays for audiences, she considers music a necessity of happy living. You can often find her singing or humming along to her favorite song on loop. Shes an avid non-fiction reader, with the exception of her obsession for George R.R. Martins A Song of Ice and Fire fantasy series, the basis for HBOs hit series Game of Thrones. And shes a lover of fashion, who is certain that heaven is a cross between a giant library and the Vogue accessories closet.

Barker is also an Orthodox Jewish convert, devout Zionist and a dual American-Israeli citizen, who is fluent in English and Hebrew. She loves to cook for and host large Shabbat dinner parties, where traditional Cholent and gefilte fish are replaced with soul food and tacos. She educates the Jewish community and prospective converts on the challenges of living as a convert, from discrimination in marriage and immigration to the struggles of isolation and the difficulty of teaching a non-Jewish grandmother the laws of keeping kosher. And she works with non-Jewish communities in understanding the insular Jewish community, Zionism and the need for a Jewish State, in hopes of lessening the current rise of antisemitism.

Barker wrote two pieces during the Spring 2019 Fellowship. Read them on our website:

She also wrote 12 pieces for the RespectAbility Report:

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Samantha Stewart, Communications Intern

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Samantha Stewart smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Samantha Stewart

Samantha Stewart was a Communications Intern with RespectAbility for Spring 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for and with people with disabilities. As a senior in the Humanities program at Poolesville High School, she has participated in her school paper, the debate team and the drama club. Stewart always has been fascinated by film and has had a burgeoning interest in misrepresentation of marginal groups since ninth grade. Her desire to be a screenwriter only allowed her interest to grow, resulting in her finding RespectAbility and applying to be a high school intern. She wants to fight stigmas and advance opportunities for those underrepresented, especially people with disabilities. Stewart hopes that as a screenwriter, she can fight to change the culture of misrepresentation and underrepresentation in the media to empower those most affected.

Before joining RespectAbility, Stewart had experience in her journalism class writing about the importance of representation in film. She also currently is conducting her own research regarding the effects of the popular film Spliton stigma toward Dissociative Identity Disorder. She has had numerous experiences working with the homeless and people with disabilities and hopes that as an intern she can learn how to become a better ally.

Stewart hopes to double major in Film Studies and Psychology at the University of Southern California to understand the intersection of the two subjects. She hopes that the intersection of film and psychology will help her be a positive contributor to the film industry with a better understanding of not only film but also the effect of film on viewers, especially stigma. She hopes to attain an MFA in screenwriting before pursuing a career in film.

Beyond academics, Stewart loves to cook and wanted to be a chef at the age of eight. She also loves to listen to music, read, photography. She recently won a Key Award from the Scholastic Art and Writing Contest for her photography. Stewart currently is re-watching Haunting of Hillhouse and reading Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn. Her favorite books are One More Thing by B.J. Novak and The Martian by Andy Weir.

Stewart wrote three pieces during the Spring 2019 internship. Check them out on our website:

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Jeremy Cooper, Nonprofit Management Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Jeremy Cooper in front of the RespectAbility banner

Jeremy Cooper

Jeremy Cooper was a Nonprofit Management Fellow in RespectAbilitys National Leadership Program for Spring 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for and with people with disabilities. Cooper majored in History and minored in English at Oberlin College, where he received a BA, and currently is working on a Masters in Public Administration from American University, which he received in May 2019.

He joined RespectAbility out of a longstanding desire to work in disability and mental health advocacy, which stems from his experiences from growing up with a younger brother with autism. Cooper hopes to gain experience in fundraising, development and advocacy at RespectAbility, in order to help raise awareness for the symptoms, treatment and equal rights of children and adults with disabilities.

Prior to joining RespectAbility, Cooper spent the past year interning at other nonprofits. These experiences include the Fairness Project, which campaigns to pass legislative votes that expand Medicaid, and Arlington Thrive, which provides emergency funds to people in need. Before college, Cooper also had several internships at Melmark, a nonprofit care facility that provides residential and educational services to children and adults with intellectual and physical disabilities.

Cooper is an avid history enthusiast. As far as hes concerned, no one can learn enough from it, such as reading about how the Civil War or World War 2 shaped modern America. Cooper is also an avid consumer of books and movies, with a taste that varies across the spectrum, from Shakespeare to Agatha Christie, and from The Godfather to Indiana Jones. He hopes to put all of that reading to good use in writing reports for the Development Team.

Cooper wrote one piece during the Spring 2019 Fellowship. Check it out on our website:

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Vivian O’Neal, Policy Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Vivian O'Neal smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Vivian O’Neal

Vivian O’Neal was a Public Policy Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program for Spring 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for people with disabilities.

O’Neal pursued a Bachelor of Arts degree in Public Relations and Political Science from The University of Southern Mississippi. She has a strong background in public speaking and advocacy work for nonprofits that benefit children with neuromuscular diseases. Fundraising has played a large role in previous service work for O’Neal, specifically for the Muscular Dystrophy Association and Children’s Miracle Network (CMN) Hospitals. Last summer, she was awarded the Miracle Maker award for raising more than $5,000 for CMN hospitals.

O’Neal’s interest in disability rights originally stemmed from the birth of her brother Josiah, who was diagnosed with a rare neuromuscular disease called Nemaline Myopathy. Josiah’s disease falls under the umbrella of Muscular Dystrophy. Watching her brother’s struggles with his disease exposed her to the loopholes within the Americans with Disabilities Act and true accessibility. O’Neal’s interest later grew from Muscular Dystrophy to extend to the entire disability community when she became more involved with nonprofit and advocacy work. She hoped to learn at RespectAbility about the different aspects of disability rights such as employment rates and unequal pay.

O’Neal joined RespectAbility as a junior in college with hopes to take her knowledge back to her hometown of Hattiesburg, MS for her senior year and moving forward. She plans to apply skills gained from her Fellowship to continue working toward the ultimate goal of fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for not only the disabled community but also for all minority groups.

Upon graduation, O’Neal hopes to move to Washington, D.C. to attend law school and pursue a career that places her in the midst of the political realm with hopes of one day potentially working on Capitol Hill.

O’Neal wrote several pieces during the Spring 2019 Fellowship. Check them out on our main website:

She also wrote 14 pieces for The RespectAbility Report:

Learn More About The National Leadership Program

Cami Howe, Nonprofit Management Fellow

National Leadership Program, Spring 2019

Cami Howe smiling in front of the RespectAbility banner

Cami Howe

Cami Howe was a Nonprofit Management Fellow in RespectAbility’s National Leadership Program for Spring 2019. RespectAbility is a nonprofit organization focused on fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities for people with disabilities. She graduated from Utah State University in December 2018 with a bachelor’s degree in Psychology. During her time as an undergraduate student, she noted a lack of research, writing, and discourse on disability, despite it being the largest minority group in the world today (invisibledisabilities.org). To help bridge this gap, she co-founded an on-campus club called The Disabled Student Alliance,which promoted self-advocacy and fought against ableism and created a community of students of all abilities. 

Howe admires and subscribes to the ideas of Dr. Gordon Allport, researcher and author of the groundbreaking book, The Nature of Prejudice,as well as Dr. Susan Fiske’s “Stereotype Content Model.In addition to her professional interest in disability, Howe personally has both a physical disability and mental illness, and thus possesses a unique firsthand account of the different ways people with disabilities often are negatively treated. 

She joined RespectAbility because she is passionate about reducing prejudices and subsequent discrimination that people with disabilities face. Howe is looking forward to gaining experience at RespectAbility that will help build her professional grant writing skills. She is exceedingly grateful for the opportunity to join like-minded people working together to actively enact meaningful change in the lives of people with disabilities.

Howes plan for her future is to finish this transition year and then pursue a doctorate degree in Social Psychology to conduct academic research on the social aspects of disability. Her ultimate goal is to teach and to publish.

In her free time, she enjoys exploring the beautiful Utah scenery such as Zion National Park. During the summer, she handcycles through canyon trails, and in the winter participates in adaptive alpine skiing. She also loves folding origami, going out for sushi and spending time with her family.  

Howe wrote two pieces during the Spring 2019 Fellowship. Check them out on our website:

Learn More About The National Leadership Program

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