
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Interviewer: Jasmine Lopez
Interviewees: Jennifer Biggers
Language: English & Spanish | Bilingual transcript available
Description:
In this special bilingual episode—the first ever in Spanish on the Docs With Disabilities Podcast—we explore the intersection of disability, culture, and education through the lens of a powerful personal and professional journey.
Jasmine Lopez sits down with Jennifer Biggers, M.Ed., a first-generation Latina Disability Resource Professional at the University of California, Riverside. With warmth, vulnerability, and insight, Jennifer shares how her identity as a Honduran-Ecuadorian American, former special education teacher, and parent of autistic children informs her deeply empathetic and culturally responsive approach to supporting disabled learners.
Together, they discuss:
This episode is a love letter to students navigating multiple marginalizations—and to the professionals working to ensure they thrive. Whether you're a student, educator, clinician, or ally, you'll leave this episode with new insights and a deepened appreciation for the power of culturally grounded support.
🔗 Bilingual transcript
Bio:
Jennifer Biggers is a disability specialist at the Student Disability Resource Center at University of California-Riverside. Jennifer works with students with psychological disabilities, chronic health conditions, and learning disabilities. Jennifer has ten years of experience of working in the K-12 setting with students with disabilities as a teacher and an administrator. Jennifer's expertise lies in post-secondary transition readiness and has taken this experience to UC-Riverside to develop programming for first year, transfer students, and students acquire a disability during their college experience. Jennifer currently oversees the SDRC Peer Mentor Program, Time Management Workshop Series, Accountability Study Groups, and SDRC Bootcamp for new a transfer students.
University of California-Riverside Campus is No. 1 in Social Mobility (U.S. News & World Report, 2019) and No.1 Most Transformative Colleges
Keywords:
Disability Resource Professionals (DRPs), Medical Education, Bilingual education, Latinx students in medicine, First-generation college students, Mental health stigma, Intersectionality, Culturally responsive support
By Dr. Lisa Meeks and Dr. Peter Poullos4.9
4848 ratings
Interviewer: Jasmine Lopez
Interviewees: Jennifer Biggers
Language: English & Spanish | Bilingual transcript available
Description:
In this special bilingual episode—the first ever in Spanish on the Docs With Disabilities Podcast—we explore the intersection of disability, culture, and education through the lens of a powerful personal and professional journey.
Jasmine Lopez sits down with Jennifer Biggers, M.Ed., a first-generation Latina Disability Resource Professional at the University of California, Riverside. With warmth, vulnerability, and insight, Jennifer shares how her identity as a Honduran-Ecuadorian American, former special education teacher, and parent of autistic children informs her deeply empathetic and culturally responsive approach to supporting disabled learners.
Together, they discuss:
This episode is a love letter to students navigating multiple marginalizations—and to the professionals working to ensure they thrive. Whether you're a student, educator, clinician, or ally, you'll leave this episode with new insights and a deepened appreciation for the power of culturally grounded support.
🔗 Bilingual transcript
Bio:
Jennifer Biggers is a disability specialist at the Student Disability Resource Center at University of California-Riverside. Jennifer works with students with psychological disabilities, chronic health conditions, and learning disabilities. Jennifer has ten years of experience of working in the K-12 setting with students with disabilities as a teacher and an administrator. Jennifer's expertise lies in post-secondary transition readiness and has taken this experience to UC-Riverside to develop programming for first year, transfer students, and students acquire a disability during their college experience. Jennifer currently oversees the SDRC Peer Mentor Program, Time Management Workshop Series, Accountability Study Groups, and SDRC Bootcamp for new a transfer students.
University of California-Riverside Campus is No. 1 in Social Mobility (U.S. News & World Report, 2019) and No.1 Most Transformative Colleges
Keywords:
Disability Resource Professionals (DRPs), Medical Education, Bilingual education, Latinx students in medicine, First-generation college students, Mental health stigma, Intersectionality, Culturally responsive support

91,010 Listeners

32,006 Listeners

38,466 Listeners

43,598 Listeners

27,361 Listeners

1,333 Listeners

141 Listeners

10,157 Listeners

14,619 Listeners

299 Listeners

56,511 Listeners

1,350 Listeners

278 Listeners

8,731 Listeners

11,391 Listeners