I, along with advisor Dr. Simpkins and student peer Katie Ward conducted research on integrating disability studies in their classrooms, by surveying faculty and students who self-describe as having a disability across an extensive tri-campus state school system. With an emphasis on intersectionality, interdisciplinarity, and interrogating diversity, the team researchers, including myself, will offer tools for bringing disability studies into conversation with existing curricula. In spending the past two quarters on this project, I have extensively read about disability, intersectionality, and interdisciplinarity. I have since utilized these readings to correctly write the surveys the team used for collecting data, being a significant contributor to our paper, and being a significant contributor to the term reference collection and academic resource collection. At the symposium, I will outlay the progress our team has made thus far, including writing the survey, sending them out to all three University of Washington campuses, and receiving the data back to analyze it and make conclusive understandings. I will also present the disability term book and resource collection that we compiled for faculty, staff, and students to access utilizing disability curriculum content. The rest of the team and I will then address our future hopes for implementing a disability curriculum and the concerns of both groups with integrating disability studies in classrooms across the curriculum. I will also describe their use of Pressbooks to publish an open-source resource that collects their findings; this resource offers suggested materials, teaching strategies, and research guides to support instructors who are less familiar with disability culture and disability studies to bring disability-related content into their teaching.