Title: A picture is worth a thousand words
1A picture is worth a thousand words
Unless you cant see the picture
2(No Transcript)
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5Making Instructional Technology Accessible To
Students With Disabilities
- Montgomery County Community College
- Ninth Annual Technology and Learning Conference
October 17, 2003
6Presenters
- Saul Finkle
- Director of Services for Students with
Disabilities - Coordinates services and accommodations for
students and advises faculty and staff on
disability related issues - Russ Loverdi
- Russell Loverdi, Counselor/Assistant Professor
- Formerly, the primary service provider for
students with disabilities. - Currently, the Interim Counseling Team-Leader
providing counseling services to students with
disabilities. - Pat Rahmlow
- Assistant Professor, Computer Science
- Teaches online, face-to-face and hybrid courses
7Why Should We Make Instructional Technology
Accessible?
- Legal Issues
- Pedagogical Issues
8Legal Issues
- 1973
- Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
- 1990
- Americans with Disabilities Act
9Section 504
- Prohibits colleges and universities from
discriminating against qualified students with
disabilities - Requires that appropriate accommodations and
auxiliary aids be provided to ensure equal access
to educational programs, services, and activities
10Americans with Disabilities ActTitle II and
Title III
- Upholds and extends the standards of 504 to
employment, communications and all policies,
procedures and practices that impact on the
treatment of students with disabilities
11Americans with Disabilities ActTitle II and
Title III
- Title II (public institutions) and Title III
(private institutions) requires effective
communication for individuals with disabilities,
including telecommunications, computer
technology, and internet based information
12Pedagogical Issues
- Impact of Instructional Technology on Learning
- Universal Instructional Design
13Advantages of Instructional Technology
- Provides opportunity for visual, hands-on, and
auditory learning - Stores, manipulates, and shares information
14Disadvantages of Instructional Technology that
is not accessible
- Students who are not visual learners
- Blindness
- Low vision
- Color blindness
- Learning Disabilities
15Disadvantages of Instructional Technology that
is not accessible
- Students who are not auditory learners
- Deaf
- HOH
- Learning Disabilities
16Disadvantages of Instructional Technology that
is not accessible
- Students who are not hands-on learners
- Neuromuscular disorders
- Paralysis
- Learning Disabilities
17Universal Instructional Design
- The basic premise of Universal Instructional
Design is that curriculum should include
alternatives to make it accessible and applicable
to students with different backgrounds, learning
styles, abilities, and disabilities.
Center for Applied Special Technology (CAST)
www.cast.org
18Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Create a welcoming classroom environment that
encourages students to identify their needs - Syllabus statement regarding accommodations
19Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Provide varied instructional methods
- Lectures
- Videos
- Text
- Diagrams
- Charts
20Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Provide a variety of ways for students to
demonstrate knowledge - Tests
- Papers
- Oral presentations
- Multi-media projects
21Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Provide natural supports for learning
- Study guides
- Discussion groups
- Practice tests
- Web sites
22Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Encourage faculty-student contact
- Interactive learning activities
- Mini interviews
23Some Principles of Universal Instructional Design
- Use technology to enhance learning and to
increase accessibility - PowerPoint and Smart Board presentations
- Videos that are closed-captioned
- Web-based materials and lecture notes that are
accessible to screen readers
24Four Reasons Why Instructional Technology May be
Inaccessible
- The student cannot navigate the screen using a
mouse due to blindness or physical impairment
25Four Reasons Why Instructional Technology May be
Inaccessible
- The student cannot read print or has difficulty
reading due to blindness, low vision, or learning
disabilities
26Four Reasons Why Instructional Technology May be
Inaccessible
- The student cannot hear audio description due to
deafness or hearing loss
27Four Reasons Why Instructional Technology May be
Inaccessible
- The student cannot comprehend or remember
information easily due to cognitive impairment
28Assistive Technology
- JAWS
- ZoomText
- Dragon Naturally Speaking
- Kurzweil 1000 and 3000
29Assistive Technology
- Trackballs
- Intellikeys
- Large Monitors
- Braille Printer and Translation Software
30Assistive Technology
- IBM Home Page Reader
- Office XP
- Read and Write
31Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Content
- Headings
- Punctuation and paragraphs
- Dates
- Date or math?
- Color based instructions
- Always have an alternative indicator
- Font size
- Relative to allow user to increase as needed
32Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Images
- Names
- Screen reader will speak
- Importance
- Do you need to hear a name or should you skip
this picture?
33Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Links
- Ability to skip
- Option to skip repetitive links on each page
- Placement
- Ability to hear content first
- Content
- Avoid click here use meaningful link text
34Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Tables
- Layout
- Vertical versus horizontal
- Headers
- Linking content cells to column and row headings
35Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Forms
- Placement of titles
- What is this text box for?
- Use default text for instruction
- Buttons
- Names
36Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWeb Based
Documents
- Frames
- Name each frame screen reader will read to
identify
37Instructional Technology ConsiderationsWord
Processing Documents
- Headings
- Invisible punctuation
- Dates
- October 17, 2003 vs. 10/17/03
- Tables
- Layout
38Instructional Technology ConsiderationsColor
Blindness
- Contrast
- Light / dark
- Color based instructions
- Provide an alternative
- Resources
- colorfilter.wickline.org/colorblind/filter/
- See your web page from view of color blind user
- www.toledo-bend.com/colorblind/Ishihara.html
- Tests for color blindness
39Instructional Technology ConsiderationsOther
Disabilities
- Motor Skills
- Cant use mouse
- Specialized hardware
- Hearing Impaired
- Video Closed Captioning
- Audio Transcript
40Reference Material
- cast.org/bobby/
- Check web sites for accessibility compliance
- www.w3.org/WAI/
- Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
- faculty.mc3.edu/prahmlow/tech03
- PowerPoint presentation
- Web site list
41Questions