AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Accommodating Blind / VI / LD Students Gaeir Dietrich Alternate Media Training Specialist High Tech Center.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
USING ACCESSIBLE COURSE MATERIAL – WHAT IS INVOLVED? Presenters: Kathy Buob, M.A. Lyn Clemons, B.A. Benjamin Tzeng Sengoku, B.S.
Advertisements

Assistive Technology in Public Libraries
Carol Leynse Harpold, MS AdEd, OTR/L, ATP. Definition Section Assistive technology device. Any item, piece of equipment or product system, whether.
Bedfordshire County Council, Childrens Services Miriam Waller –Resource officer/Technican Visual Impairment team Peripatetic to all schools in Bedfordshire.
Services to Students with Disabilities California State University, Sacramento AIRC (916)
Assistive Technology (AT) for the visually impaired person by Raksak Chairanjuansakun.
Graduate Education Council Accessibility of Electronic and Information Technology December 10, 2013 Diana Prieto, Office of Equal Opportunity Marla Roll,
Gaeir Dietrich * Director High Tech Center Training Unit Commission Chair.
Building Accessible Sites Jason Maseberg-Tomlinson Assistant Director Disability Support Services.
Assistive technology: A delivery model for college and university student services Robert Perkins School of Education University of Charleston, SC Charleston,
® Copyright 2008 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. ADOBE® ACCESSIBILITY Achieving Accessibility with PDF Greg Pisocky Accessibility Specialist.
The Governing Laws Change High School College The applicable law is the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act or IDEA. IDEA guarantees each student.
® Copyright 2008 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. ADOBE® ACCESSIBILITY AT Access to Flash and PDF Matt May 25 Mar 2010 Featuring.
VA AHEAD – Spring Conference March 22, Technologies of the Distant Past Gutenberg and Movable Type Presses… to 1850 Kevin Eng, Brett Osteen.
February 24, 2015 Allison Kidd, ATRC. Direct Services for CSU Students & Employees with Disabilities Ensure Equal Access to Technology & Electronic Information.
SETTING UP AN ALTERNATE FORMAT PRODUCTION SYSTEM By Robert Lee Beach Assistive Technology Specialist Kansas City Kansas Community College.
Alternate Media and the CSU Context Mary Cheng California State University AHEAD Conference San Diego July 18, 2006.
High Volume Production of Alternative Text: Supporting a Statewide System The Alternative Media Access Center.
Assessing for Adaptive Technology Needs Disability Training Network July 2007.
By Jeffrey Dell Assistive Technology Specialist Mary Theobald Graduate Assistant Alt Text Office of Disability Services Cleveland State University.
Session 803: Processing PDF Files Gaeir Dietrich Director High Tech Center Training Unit
Processing PDF: How to Go from PDF to E-text to Audio Gaeir Dietrich Director High Tech Center Training Unit of the California Community Colleges Foothill.
Processing PDF: How to Go from PDF to E-text to Audio Gaeir Dietrich Director High Tech Center Training Unit of the California Community Colleges Foothill.
Alternate Format Overview Gaeir Dietrich ● Director High Tech Center Training Unit of the California Community Colleges Accessing Higher Ground 2011.
ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGIES FOR READING By Tracey Young.
Determining Assistive Technology Needs of People who are Blind or Visually Impaired Ike Presley American Foundation for the Blind 100 Peachtree Street,
Assistive Technology Ability to be free. Quick Facts  Assistive technology is technology used by individuals with disabilities in order to perform functions.
Maine CITE Program Training Webinar Everyone Needs to Know About Learning Ally and Bookshare January 16, 2013.
Assistive Technology in UCC 11 th December Assistive Technology: What is it? 2 The most commonly used definition is the American definition, which.
Website Accessibility for People with Disabilities Kate Todd November 27, 2007.
Supporting Literacy Skills with Alternative Formats. EA Draffan. Highlighted text.
Shannon Lavey, MS, OTR Assistive Technology Resource Center Department of Occupational Therapy Colorado State University July 15, 2014.
Equal Access: Making Print Accessible For the blind and visually impaired Zoe Rath Reference Librarian Berklee College of Music
BOOKSHARE.ORG HOW YOU CAN LEVEL THE FIELD AND ASSIST STUDENTS IN READING AND RESEARCH SUCCESS.
Lawyers Like Paper Brief Service documents Contracts, such as retainer agreements Demographic forms, such as Income verification forms Releases Informational.
Wyoming Institute for Disabilities University of Wyoming Accessible Instructional Materials (AIM) and NIMAS* What AIM Means for Principals and School Administrators.
A LTERNATE T EXT P RODUCTION C ENTER A California Community College Program Mike Bastine ATPC Director An Electronic Text and Braille production center.
Designing accessible multimedia educational materials Piotr Brzoza, MSc Silesian University of Technology.
Information for Parents Digital Reading 5/27/2014 Debbie Hebert, PT, ATP.
Kurzweil 3000 Ron Stewart Access Technology Instructor High Tech Center Training Unit.
Assistive Technologies for Vision Impairments and Reading.
© Disability Business Technical Assistance Center—Northeast 1 Employment and Disability Institute Access to Print Materials DBTAC –
Julie K Balassa Valencia College November   Alternate formats so woven into the fabric of the learning experience that they disappear as a separate.
E-Text Research Project Results & Recommendations presented to the CSU Advisory Committee for Services to Students with Disabilities November 22, 2002.
Adobe Accessibility By Margaret Hartman. Who Benefits: Individuals who have motor impairments, low vision, or blindness Creators of PDF documents and.
Defining Accessibility. This PowerPoint will cover the following topics: – What is Accessibility? – Examples of Accessibility – Accommodations for Students.
Accommodating Clients who have Low Vision or Blindness Kim Borowicz Legal Aid Committee Meeting October 17, 2013.
Microsoft Assistive Technology Products Brought to you by... Jill Hartman.
Community College Accommodation and Technology Services BRIAN BRAUTIGAM Alternate Media Specialist Riverside Community College District.
 10:30 – Welcome, Introductions & All-encompassing Overview  10:50 – Alternate Format (Gaeir)  12:15 – Accessible STEM (Ron)  1:00 – Lunch (on your.
Special Needs in the Online Environment By Tammy McMullen.
Strategies for Math & Science Accessibility Ron Stewart Access Technology Instructor High Tech Training Center Unit California Community Colleges.
WHAT SHOULD YOU HAVE IN YOUR ALTERNATE FORMAT TOOLBOX?
What Is Accessible Format? Presented by: Mayda LaRosse, MA For: Job Corp Disability Workshop San Diego, CA June 16, 2000.
+ Accessible Document Basics Cindy Compeán Accessibility/Assistive Technology Specialist
Alternate Media Workflow Strategies for PDF. Why PDF? Portable document format (PDF) Reads the same on any computer Looks like the book Contains all the.
 By: Ann Carey, M.A., CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Assistive Technology Building Coach.
SUPPORTING DIVERSE LEARNING STYLES WITH ALTERNATE FORMATS OF INFORMATION UNIVERSAL DESIGN FOR LEARNING.
U.S. Department of Education Office of Special Education Programs National Instructional Materials Accessibility Standard (NIMAS)
Technology for Diverse Learners Lisa Thomas Office for Students with Disabilities.
Session 905: Transition to Community College Gaeir Dietrich High Tech Center Training Unit of the California Community Colleges
University of Warwick Library
Next Generation Accessible Media Tracking, Exchange, and Management
SACRAMENTO STATE High Tech Center
CSU Diversity Symposium September Allison Kidd and Anna Walker
Fall Ramp Up, August 2016 Allison Kidd and Anna Walker
Teresa Haven, PhD Co-Chair AHEAD TSC Ron Stewart, MS President, ATHEN
Curry School of Education
SACRAMENTO STATE Assistive Technology Lab
Ike Presley American Foundation for the Blind
Presentation transcript:

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Accommodating Blind / VI / LD Students Gaeir Dietrich Alternate Media Training Specialist High Tech Center Training Unit (HTCTU)

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Who are these students?  About 3.5% of the 2.5 million California Community College (CCC) students have some declared disability  About 1% of CCC students qualify as having a print disability  Most of these students have a learning disability   Data from California Community College Chancellor’s Office Web site (Data Mart):

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 CCC System  Students with print disabilities  Blind, VI, LD, mobility impaired, a few ADD/ABI

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Print Disabled  Sensory deficit or processing deficit?  Very different populations with significantly similar needs  Need alternate formats to access print  Strategies  Improve ability to recognize text  Braille, large print, font changes  Use audio access to supplement visual access  Spoken text—human or machine

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 audio formats TTS Learning Disabled Low VisionBlind Braille refreshable Braille display expanded spacing, sans serif fonts manipulatives color cues large print tracing highlighting tactile graphics screen reader simultaneous text & audio scan and read systems light text on dark large cursor DAISY screen magnifier

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Accommodations  Two-pronged approach  Assistive technology  Alternate media  Additional needs  Learning the technology  Access to the technology  Study skills  Strategies

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Alternate Media

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Definitions  Alternate media  An alternative medium of presentation from that in which the work was originally done  E-text (electronic text)  Words (text) a computer can read

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Issues  timeliness of delivery  accuracy of the translation  provision in a manner and medium appropriate to the significance of the message and the abilities of the individual with the disability

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Where is the book fairy?  RFB&D (  Subscription based  Human-narration DAISY format  Bookshare (  Text-to-speech (TTS) DAISY format  Currently free to all students!  Project Gutenberg (  Free, out of copyright, Word / PDF / HTML

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Other Options  AMX database (  Institutions join and exchange resources  ATPC (  Has Braille textbooks for sale

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 What about the publishers?  E-text from publishers   Getting better but…  Files are source files, not end-user files  Will still need processing  For best results, request PDF files and convert to other formats.  Can help you meet legal requirements but will not do it all for you!

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Producing E-text In-house  Scan  Take a picture  Optical Character Recognition  The “other” OCR  Recognizing the text in the picture  Edit  The better the original picture, the less the editing time  Convert clean files to final user format

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Creation Pathway E-Text Large Print Audio or Audio & Text Braille

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Assistive Technology

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 AT for Blind Students  Screen readers  Hal/Supernova, JAWS, WindowEyes  Refreshable Braille displays  ALVA, Focus, Brailliant  Scan and read software  Kurzweil 1000, OpenBook

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 AT for Low Vision Students  Hard copy enlargement: CCTV  Ergo, Optelec, SmartView, Clarity, Traveler  Screen enlargement  Luna/SuperNova, ZoomText, MAGic  Cursor enlargement  Built into OS

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 AT for LD Students  Scan and read software  Kurzweil 3000, WYNN, Read&Write Gold, Easy Scan  Reading software  Text-to-speech (TTS)  TextAloud, Premier, Adobe Reader, Natural Reader

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Demo

Simple E-text TextAloud

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Braille Word to Duxbury Braille Translation Software

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Kurzweil TIFF or PDF to text

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 DAISY Dolphin Easy Reader

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Additional Needs

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Reality Check  Great, we have the alternate book… but can we read this one either???

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Feedback Loop

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Resources

Relevant OCR Cases  Loyola Marymount University (1992)  Brooklyn College (1996)  California State College, Los Angeles (1997)  California Community College (1998)  City College of San Francisco (1998)  California State College, Long Beach (1999)  California State College, Fullerton (2004)  California State University, Los Angeles (2006)  California State University, San Bernardino (2006)

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Helpful Web Sites   High Tech Center Training Unit   SUNY Disability Services Council Alternate Format Materials Handbook   CSU Accessible Technology Initiative  and  Higher Education Publishing, American Association of Publishers

AHEAD 2008, Reno, Nevada, USA July 14 – 19, 2008 Contact Me!  Gaeir (rhymes with “fire”) Dietrich   