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Extending the Future of Assistive Technology Presented by Dr. Fred T. Hofstetter University of Delaware.

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Presentation on theme: "Extending the Future of Assistive Technology Presented by Dr. Fred T. Hofstetter University of Delaware."— Presentation transcript:

1 Extending the Future of Assistive Technology Presented by Dr. Fred T. Hofstetter University of Delaware

2 “If you can dream it, you can do it.” We are living at an exciting time when technological dreams are coming true. Dreams

3 Moore’s Law It’s been happening ever since, and scientists predict that this trend will continue at least until the year 2010. In 1965, Intel’s Chairman, Gordon Moore, predicted that the capacity of a computer chip will double every 18 months.

4 Moore’s Law

5 Al Gore’s Law Computer prices are declining at a rate of 50% per year. Computers will be everywhere. Computers will truly become personal.

6 Wearable Computers Dockers Mobile Pant Dockers Mobile Pant Levi’s is designing clothes to let you wear computers.

7 Sign Language Wearables At MIT, scientists are designing a wearable computer that can recognize sign language. wearable computersign language

8 Universal Access The dream is to provide a universally accessible multimedia interface for all students, particularly those with special needs: First as learners through an IMS that is truly accessible. Later as workers in the new information economy.

9 Digitization, Convergence, and Distribution We can digitize anything you can read, see or hear; put it online in a standardized format; and provide worldwide access any time or place.

10 Scan any text

11 Snap any picture

12 Record any sound

13 Capture any video

14 Publish to the Web

15 Deliver Anywhere

16 Wireless Britannica Search the complete Encyclopædia Britannica from your wireless Palm VII, using the new Britannica Traveler application. Britannica Traveler

17 Palm VII Wireless Internet

18 Internet Messenger Receive pages, e- mail, and news via the new Internet Messenger watch from Timex.Internet Messenger Right now the service is free for the first year.

19 Internet Messenger

20 Teledesic Satellite Network The Teledesic Network will consist of 288 satellites divided into 12 planes, each with 24 satellites.Teledesic Network As the satellite planes orbit north-to-south and south-to-north, the Earth rotates underneath.

21 Where Matters Not “On the Internet, there’s no there.” Anna Paquin MCI commercial

22 Implications for Education Putting Theory into Practice with Serf®

23 What Is Serf? Invented in 1997, Serf is a self- paced multimedia learning environment that enables students to navigate a course, access instructional resources, communicate, and submit assignments over the Web.Serf Instructors create courses without having to know HTML.

24 Logging On

25 Viewing the Course

26 Student Control Panel

27 Instructor Options

28 Editing a Serf Syllabus

29 Textual Content (adds text to the current cluster) Class title (starts a new class cluster) Generic title (starts a new generic cluster) Preamble title (starts a new preamble cluster) Multimedia graphic (adds content with a graphic icon and link) Multimedia movie (adds content with a movie icon and link) Multimedia sound (adds content with a sound icon and link) Multimedia Web site (adds content with a Web site icon and link) Observational assignment Web portfolio assignment Web query assignment Submit file assignment True/false question Multiple choice question Fill-in-the-blank question Image map question Short answer question Slider question (Likert scale) Examination (launches a test) Strand (launches a tutorial module) Diagnostic (launches a self-assessment) Survey (administers a questionnaire) Control panel (creates a customized control panel) Menu bar (replaces or augments the current Serf menu bar) Banner (replaces or augments the current banner) Trailer (replaces or augments the current trailer) Kinds of Syllabus Events

30 Creating an Event

31 Editor Viewer

32 Discussion Forums

33 Reading Forum Topics

34 Using the Gradebook

35 Assigning Grades

36 Teaching in the Zone Helping All Students by Giving What They Need, When They Need It

37 Identifying the Zone Vygotsky defined the zone of proximal development as the difference between the difficulty level of a problem a student can cope with independently and the level that can be accomplished with help from others. Systems like Serf identify the zone and provide the help from others.

38 Throwing the Zone Away In traditional teaching, we throw the zone away. Students take tests, the results of which often are never handed back. Students hand in term papers at the end of a course with no chance to rewrite them. We are throwing the zone away.

39 Teaching in the Zone Constructivist teaching via the Web brings the student into the zone. The instructor becomes a coach who helps the student achieve goals. Time shifting makes the process efficient and manageable for student and teacher alike.

40 A Hypothesis The effectiveness of an online learning system is directly related to the degree in which it facilitates teaching in the zone. Methods I use to do this include: Giving the student another try Just-in-time discussion Customized scaffolding Gallery of other students’ work

41 Problem-based Learning The problem with problem-based learning is assessment. How do you assess what each student has contributed in a cooperative learning environment? Systems like Serf solve this problem by logging what each student contributes.

42 Identifying Team Skills Imagine an IMS in which learners with special needs could join teams and exhibit their online skills. Then imagine a Department of Labor database being able to match the skills of those learners to actual jobs that could employ students with special needs after they finish school.

43 School to Work Helping Learners with Special Needs Plan Careers and Get Jobs

44 DOL Databases The Department of Labor is creating a suite of Web sites to help people get a career and obtain the training necessary to qualify for a job in their chosen field. Every American will have a Career Management Account and a Lifelong Learning Portfolio.

45 America’s Job Bank America’s Job Bank lets you track job searches, post your resume, create cover letters and develop a personal online Career Kit to facilitate your job search.

46 AJB Home Page

47 AJB Job Categories

48 AJB Computer Jobs

49 AJB Programmers

50 AJB Programmer Openings

51 AJB Selecting a Job

52 AJB Job Description

53 The Instructional Management Systems Project The Department of Labor Developed These Databases as a Contributing Member of the IMS Project

54 Instructional Management Systems (IMS) Project Develops open specifications for facilitating online distributed learning activities, such as:specifications locating and using educational content tracking learner progress reporting learner performance exchanging student records between administrative systems.

55 IMS Partners Apple, IBM, Microsoft, Cisco, Sun DOD, DOL, ADL, ETS WebCT, Blackboard, Click2Learn PeopleSoft, SCT California, Michigan, Maryland, Virginia Tech, Miami-Dade Plus hundreds of developers

56 WGBH NCAM SALT Grant WGBH‘s National Center For Accessible Media has been awarded $1.8 million to develop access specs for online learning. This partnership with the IMS project aims to benefit the e-learning industry and learners with disabilities worldwide. http://www.imsproject.org/pressrelease/pr010116.html

57 Specifications for Accessible Learning Technologies (SALT) Means to enable alternate presentation in response to learner profiles Means to identify and activate accessibility features within content Solutions to enable accessibility of text— HTML, XML, PDF and E-books Solutions to enable accessibility of multimedia content— audio, video, illustrations Solutions to enable accessibility of special material—mathematical notation, graphs, charts.

58 SALT Results SALT Results Year I (2002) SALT compiled a set of guidelines for accessibility in online learning tools.guidelines SALT created an extension to the IMS Learner Information Profile (LIP) to enable online learning systems to know the student's accessibility needs. SALT proposed an extension to IMS metadata standards to permit content to adjust based on accessibility settings in the LIP; hopes for approval Spring 2003.

59 The Web is Changing From an HTML page-based paradigm To an XML component-based model In HTML, you used a standard set of tags to create a static page XML enables you to define your own tags for use in dynamic ways XSL lets you teach the browsers what to do when they encounter your special tags

60 XML and Special Education XML is the trend in computing today. It is a markup language that lets you define your own tags. Applications can share data marked up as XML. Style sheets determine how the XML will display onscreen. Imagine style sheets for the different assistive technologies.

61 Web Services XML can also be used behind the scenes for data exchange with a Web Service. A Web Service is a type of computer application that receives and responds to XML requests received over HTTP from clients on the Internet. Because HTTP is the most basic protocol on the Internet, the Web Service enables you to write program components that can serve any end-user or computer in the world to which you provide access.

62

63 What XML Can Enable Access from PCs, PDAs, Wireless Devices, Set-top boxes, Mobile Phones Embedding of special features within content, such as audio, video, and illustrations Rendering of text in the learner’s preferred format—HTML, XML, PDF and E-books Real-time rendering of mathematical notation, graphs, and charts Alternate representation in response to learner profiles

64 A Little SMIL SMIL = Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language. SMIL is a W3C standard that is working its way into the browsers. SMIL is XML-based and has accessibility features. Let’s consider an example and then dream about the possibilities.

65 SMIL Possibilities The Kennedy example knew whether to display the subtitles based on the accessibility settings on the user’s computer. Imagine what it could be like if the content could sense accessibility issues and adjust automatically to the user’s needs. That is what SALT is doing with its proposed linkage between the Learner Information Profile and the IMS metadata standards.

66 The Future’s Future Is Education’s Challenge How to Ensure Emerging Standards Meet the Needs of Special Education

67 Recommendations Join the IMS project. Join the Department of Labor’s AJB/ATB/Acinet project. Work with the WGBH NCAM SALT Partnership to make sure the IMS accessibility specs meet the needs of the special education community. Join the W3C WAI Project.

68 W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) "The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect." -- Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Director and inventor of the World Wide WebTim Berners-Lee W3C = World Wide Web ConsortiumWorld Wide Web Consortium


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