Another advantage of using tools such as the iPads in the
classroom is the guided access selection that keeps the iPad locked in a single
app. Enabling the guided access selection on iPads before given them to my students
will reassure me that they are only viewing the material that they are intended
to view. This will allow me to spend more time helping students in the
classroom and less time monitoring student viewing content. Of course, there
are other selections found in the accessibility section of the iPad that are
useful when working with students with disabilities that I learned during our
second class. The assistive touch selection and the new gesture selection
allows individuals that may have difficulty touching the screen gain greater
control over using the iPad.
We also looked deeper into presumed competency by taking
part in an activity where we selected a video and discussed it on our course
blog. For this activity, I selected the YouTube video, “In My Language,” that
shares the thoughts of Amanda Baggs. In the video, Amanda shares with the
viewer how she interacts with the world around her. She does this my communicating
to the viewer using a text to speech program on a computer. Amanda explains
that she is very much interested in the world around her and may interact with
her surroundings differently than others. This does not mean that she is not
learning and taking in information. By providing Amanda with assistive technology,
such as the computer she was using in the video to tell her story, she can
effectively communicate her ideas to others. It is my job as a teacher to
provide my students with the tools they need to take part in the learning
process, and in other cases, to allow them to effectively communicate their
learning with me and other members of the class. From watching Amanda’s video,
I gained a greater appreciation of how others learn and take part in the
learning process and understand that we all learn in different ways. It is up
to me as a teacher to provide my students with learning opportunities and the
tools needed to express those learnings. Failing to provide my students with
those opportunities, would only reinforce the idea of presumed incompetency.
This would be a failure on my part as an educator.
I agree with your thoughts about Kurzweil, Evan. I teach high school, and last year in my grade 9 science class I found that when a few LD students had to go to a desktop to use a program that reads to them, they didn't want to because it distinguished them as being "different" from the others. In addition, sometimes the technology wouldn't work, and I've never received professional development about assistive technology so I never felt comfortable dealing with the problem. If a student could have an iPad at their desk and use the speech selection feature, I think their school experience would be much better. Thanks for your post!
ReplyDeleteThanks Evan. Remember it isn't just your responsibility to know what AT will work and to provide it and implement...you have a whole team supporting you including AT Specialists, SLDs, LD Specialists, Psychologists, Autism Consultants etc. You are not alone:)
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