Showing posts with label cognitive disabilities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cognitive disabilities. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2007

Empowerment

An elementary school student felt empowered this week and his excitement was contagious. Let me tell you about it.

I was asked to assess a fifth grade student with cognitive disabilities who is currently unable to read beyond a few sight words and therefore unable to write as well. In the course of our assessment, I showed him how he could type his initials and then press the space bar and his whole name would appear in Word (using the autocorrect feature). He loved it!

I then showed him how he could hear his name read outloud by clicking on the WordTalk Toolbar right in Word. The enormous smile on his face spoke volumes. He typed his initials again, and clicked the WordTalk icon again. Then he asked me to type a sentence about a preferred subject which I did. He listened to all the text several times. I showed him how to do it just once and he had control over what he listened to. That's all it took.

Then, we walked to where his teacher was working with other students in his group and he demonstrated what he learned to them. His excitement was contagious! He had never had this opportunity before and he couldn't wait to share what he could do.

This was a beginning - this student learned that although he is essentially a non-reader and non-writer, there are tools that will help him to overcome those difficulties and empower him in ways that his teachers did not realize was possible. The power of voice through text-to-speech combined with assistive technology software will remove the obstacles to learning that this student has encountered up until now. And because every word is highlighted as it is read and because he likes to hear the sentences repeatedly, it will be interesting to see what effect this has on increasing his sight word vocabulary.

Empowering students. Seeing the outcomes. Sharing the excitement. Isn't this what teaching is all about?

So, who have you empowered this week?

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Tech Advocacy

There is a segment of our student population that is too frequently overlooked when it comes to the use of assistive and educational technology. That segment is our students with cognitive disabilities.

That's my experience. Is it yours as well?

Why are these kids denied the opportunity to access these tools which can support their learning styles and promote success? I challenge you to think outside the box, today, and learn more about possible solutions.

There are so many excellent options that are typically never considered. Start with STAGES Assessment Software to determine what stage of cognitive development they are at. Then explore.

Clicker 5. Cloze Pro. IntelliTools Classroom Suite. Balanced Literacy. Start-to-Finish Books. Writing with Symbols. PixWriter. Text-to-speech in any program to accommodate for reading issues. The use of the microphone to input ideas and accommodate for written language issues, including the mechanics of writing. The autosummarize feature in Word to provide cognitive rescaling.

Teach yourself something new today. Your students will thank you for it.