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FCTD - Sep 2009 - Assistive Technology
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“Nobody Is Too ‘Anything’ to Read, Write or Communicate”
The late news broadcaster Walter Cronkite catalogued the ills of the world every night for television viewers. But through the cataract of daily despair he always glimpsed a reason to hope, to be joyful about the possibilities of the moment and beyond. For the tens of millions of viewers who watched his coverage of the first lunar landing 40 years ago that enthusiasm reached out from their TV sets, when, at the moment of human touchdown on the surface of the moon, Cronkite shed his cloak of objectivity and exuberantly exclaimed, “Oh, boy!” -
Despite the many daily challenges that confront them in their sphere, members of school district assistive technology teams nationwide share Cronkite’s enthusiasm for the vast potential of technology to change the lives of individuals with disabilities.
Sure, the struggles AT team members face are daunting: lack of time and money; too many pre-service and in-service teachers without sufficient AT training; funding-strapped districts that are sometimes reluctant to approve teams’ AT recommendations for individual students; the reluctance of some districts to accept AT’s viability, and a continuing belief in a few education quarters that some children with disabilities may never learn to read and write. Fortunately, among district AT team members – speech-language pathologists (SLP’s), occupational therapists (OT’s) and others – the technology flame burns brighter than ever. Their enthusiasm still bubbles. Their thirst for information about the latest technology developments that may aid their district’s children is unquenched. And their conviction that no child is too disabled to read or write remains not only ironclad but often translates into a hard-won happy reality for the children with whom they work.
FCTD Aug 2009 - RJ Cooper
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Many people who work with children with disabilities will recognize that phrase from the definition of assistive technology (AT) in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 2004 (IDEA). This month the Family Center turns its newsletter focus to an icon of the AT industry, someone who has spent several decades modifying and customizing devices to serve the needs of the broadest range of children with disabilities – RJ Cooper.
FCTD | Computer-Based Assessment and Instruction: Do They Make the Grade?
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Computer-Based Assessment and Instruction:
Do They Make the Grade? -
As the digital age remakes almost all aspects of society, including K-12 public school education, it is no wonder that computer-based assessments and instruction are beginning to make inroads into the classroom, where paper-based approaches have held sway for generations.
2009 Summer Institute on Assistive Technology
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2009 Summer Institute on Assistive Technology
Register today for the 2009 Online Summer Institute on Assistive & Instructional Tecnology. The Institute will take place July 20-31, 2009. This year's topics are: Use of Social Media Tools and Accessible Instructional Materials: NIMAS and Beyond. Whether you participate in the Institute for continuing education credit or just to increase your knowledge, our faculty of assistive technology experts will share successful strategies and useful resources. Join colleagues throughout the country from the comfort of your office or home.
FCTD | Summer Camp: Trees, Tents & Technology
Children with disabilities who use assistive technology will soon flock to residential and day camps throughout the county. There, they will be met by college-age counselors, digital natives, who are eager users of technology they know and eager learners of technology with which they are not yet familiar.
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