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Stanford Sites

Welcome to this demo site!

This sites provides information, examples, and tips about the Stanford Sites platform. Explore this site to learn about functionalities, features that support building and designing, best practices, and more. 

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Meet our Team

Using a List Paragraph to showcase person profiles and create a Meet our Team section. 

It Can Be Anything

The film is an inter-dimensional journey of creativity through the lens of Rachel’s drawings. Her work represents a unique and vast creative landscape to explore. More importantly, her philosophical outlook establishes an open-mindedness and inclusivity that is both beautiful and inspiring. Our intention was to leverage that outlook and use her phrase "It Can Be Anything" as a mantra to steer us through her journey.

Learn more about this film

Rachel has an intellectual disability and has been an artist for over 8 years. She loves to draw and create. The images, shapes and feelings you embody when looking at her work is truly special. While she has a hard time communicating verbally, her art has a way of connecting with people and communicating on a whole other level.

posted on Vimeo by Immediate Group

This is a collection of cards

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Academic Department

Building 100
Stanford University 
Stanford, CA 94305

email: sunet@stanford.edu 
phone: (650) 723-xxxx 
fax: (650) 723-xxxx

Officer Name

Campus Building, office 000  
Stanford University 
Stanford, CA


email: sunet@stanford.edu  
phone: (650) 123-4567 

illustration of cat eating ramen
illustration of women holding her head

Image from an article on the TPGI website. 

Beyond WCAG: Losing Spoons Online
by: Lē McNamara

Spoon theory is a metaphor in which one’s physical and mental capacity for each day is represented by a fixed number of spoons that gets replenished each day. Some people are given more spoons than others, and each time you need to expend mental or physical energy as part of your day, that removes one (or more than one) of your spoons. And once you reach zero spoons, that means that you’ve exhausted your mental and physical capacity for the day—and there’s no more that you can do. Read the full article