- If a student declared a disability in your institution or work context today, what support would be offered to them?
As a main stream secondary education institution Learning Support staff are employed in addition to teachers to support students with specific learning difficulties. Physical impairment (visual, auditory, motor/dexterity) is less common and is dealt with on an individual basis for any student that requires additional support.
- What would be the costs and benefits to the student of accepting or using that support?
2. What technology or technologies do you use most frequently (i.e. on a daily basis or more) to assist in your personal, work or social life; for example a calculator or satellite navigation?
- How much help or support did you need or have to help you learn how to use this to its full potential?
3. Using the definitions of assistive technology provided in Chapter 3 and others that you come across in your reading, which of the following technologies would you consider to be an assistive technology and why?
- Mobile phone - Assistive Technology. At first I would have classed a mobile phone as primarily a communications technology, but with the increasing availability of internet access on phone handsets they are becoming multi-purpose mobile devices.
- A document folder placed on the desktop of a PC using the short-cut feature within Windows - Assistive Technology. It creates easy access to files which may otherwise have involved substantial navigation using a mouse.
- Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) - still thinking about this. I haven't ever really used one so I'm not sure if its an assistive technology or just a useful thing
- Google search engine - Google search engine makes searching for and retrieving information very easy. The results pages contain lists of links ... would this make it unfriendly for screen readers? Is it accessible? I would imagine it is but I am currently trying to find an accessibility statement or similar to confirm this in google's corporate information.
4. How helpful do you think the metaphor of a ‘level-playing field’ is in:
- persuading practitioners of the need for developing accessible elearning
- counteracting arguments against making adjustments for disabled learners on the grounds that it gives disabled learners an unfair advantage over non-disabled learners?
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