Showing posts with label accessibility. Show all posts
Showing posts with label accessibility. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

PC Accessibility

This school year has been a tough one for me for sharing on this blog what we have done in the classroom and the ideas we shared for specific children. I not only had limited access to computers because I had no desk this year but there was twice as much paper work and data collection this year which has led to mostly the posting of articles I find in my travels and those that arrive in my email via Google Mail Search. I have not had access to Intellitools Classroom Suites except to share what I have posted 2 years ago or what  other teachers on the exchange site have posted. If I were using my own school computer, I would have been able to make specific activities for what I know my teachers of my kids are working on.

All of this has been frustrating as if I'm expected to help the children while keeping a novel's worth of paper work on 20+ children at nine schools in Henrietta, my "caroffice." Meanwhile, I've had to be concerned with a new evaluation system for teachers in our state; a system which the designers had no idea how to include or evaluate people who do what I do and was implemented before all the kinks were worked out. Like 99.9  % of my colleagues, we came to work with children and not all of this paper. But, enough of my grumbling.

I wanted to share some accessibility features that are already standard PCs. This is important because most of the schools use PC's Macs are available and have awesome features for our kids but when they go to the library or sit in classes with sighted peers, knowing how to access these accessibility features is crucial. Besides that, I find that my students who are in "regular" classes want to use whatever their peers use with accommodations rather than have an entirely different system.
This information also helps the teachers of my kids relax as they understand they don't need to have anything special installed on their computers that will crash them or make them unusable for the other students in their classes.

  • View: The view shortcut which enlarges print in documents and on most web sites is simply holding the control (CTRL) key while moving the mouse wheel in and out. You will see the print getting larger or smaller. It is easier than trying to click the "view" menu and works on older and newer models. This is the function my low vision kids like best because they don't have to use any different programs or special  VI equipment/attachments. In newer versions of Windows, particularly MS Office 2013 there is what is called the "ribbon" for enlarging and accessing other accommodating features. Click here for information and a tutorial on accessibility in MS Office 2013.
  • MicroSoft Narrator/Speech: In the recent past MS Narrator was  acceptable as something that was usable until one could get JAWS installed. If you cannot find it on one of your older model computers, it can be downloaded for free from the Microsoft web site. Now there is another speech application on the later versions of Windows. It  "hears" the typists voice and translates what he/she says into a microphone into print. There is also a version of Narrator for touch screen tablets and smart phones.
  • Contrast: If glare is an issue or if lighter backgrounds  wash out dark print one can tint the back ground color. I have a student with albinism who prefers to type in Ms Word with a pink background instead of white. Most of my other students prefer to make the fonts white or yellow on a black or dark blue background. 
  • On Screen Key Board:  allows the user to use the mouse to access an key board that is on the screen.
I found this page of accessibility features with downloads and video tutorials  called Microsoft Accessibility. Click here to get to it or type this into your browser: http://www.microsoft.com/enable/
A brief introduction to some of these most commonly used accessibility features are at this link: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/What-accessibility-features-does-Windows-offer
Apple has a like page here: http://www.apple.com/accessibility/

I also like to teach the keyboard command strokes which can also be found on the Freedom Scientific web site for JAWS screenreader users. Here is a link to my school site for some of those commands: http://lee.ebrschools.org/KATHYNICHOLSLEE/explore.cfm/gomouseless/

I didn't mention tablets here except briefly but some of these and other features are in iPads and Android platform tablets, and smart phones but that's for another article. I wanted to address computer use in schools here.


Thursday, May 17, 2012

Kurzweil 3000 Supports College Students with Learning Disabilities


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Cambium Learning Technologies
Kurzweil 3000® and firefly support college students with learning disabilities

FREE TRIAL

See why community colleges across California choose Kurzweil 3000 - firefly to support their students.
Kurzweil 3000® - firefly, the award-winning, research-based, assistive technology tool, has been helping learners of all ages with learning disabilities—those diagnosed with dyslexia, dysgraphia or other literacy challenges—to learn and succeed alongside their peers since 1996.

The best just keeps getting better! New Disabled Student Services pricing for colleges and universities is now available. Affordable upgrade and conversion opportunities are also available for those customers with older versions of our software.

Contact Sales and place your order today!


Kurzweil 3000 Delivers Digital and Print File Accessibility
Direct access to Word, PDF, RTF, TXT, and more!
Scanning and reading of any print document
Output to DAISY 2 audio
Save to DAISY 3
Integration with Bookshare and other online content resources
Read the Web using Internet Explorer® or Mozilla Firefox®
MathML support with MathPlayer from Design Science, Inc.
MP3 audio file creation for use with iPods, iPhones, and iPads
Language Learning Supports
Multiple English and bi-lingual dictionaries
Google® Translator
American Heritage® Human Pronunciations
English and Spanish picture dictionaries
Scanning and recognition in multiple languages for the same file
Voice Note tool
Research and Process Writing Functionalities
Brainstorm and Outline tools
Sticky notes
Mark-up extraction to outlines and column notes
Writing templates for common assignments
Auditory spell check
Word prediction
Thesaurus and online reference tools
Our NEW web-based firefly product provides anytime, anywhere access to digital content with the most useful supports required by students, including:
Text-to-speech
Dictionary and translation tools
Highlighters
Mac or PC? Never worry about which OS you need to support. Kurzweil 3000 Web License with firefly works on both platforms, at school, at home, wherever web access exists...at no extra cost.

To learn more go online to Kurzweil 3000 - firefly Higher Education.

Thanks for believing in Kurzweil 3000 - firefly. We appreciate your business.
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Visual Impairments Specialist Scotlandville Elementary http://lee.ebrschools.org/kathynicholslee
http://www.kathyskids.org
http://teacherweb.com/LA/RobertELeeHigh/MrsMichael/t.aspx
http://mskathyskids.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Bookshare: Training Resources Galore!


Bookshare K-12 Newsletter

March 8, 2012

Share and Connect

Like this? Share with a friend!

You can also keep up with the latest and greatest from Bookshare on the Bookshare blog, Facebook, Twitter or Accessible Twitter. Twitter logo Find us on Facebook

Introducing Your Bookshare Local Experts...

Are you looking for a local contact to help you implement Bookshare at your school or district? Are you looking for some consultation on how best to use Bookshare in the classroom? We now have a list of Bookshare Local Experts who are available to provide Bookshare consultation. These are teachers who use Bookshare regularly and have some wonderful tips to share. If you are interested in contacting your local expert please email: kristinac@benetech.org and we will connect you.

Website Updates

Bookshare's product management and engineering teams have been hard at work to make Bookshare even better. This week, for example, you may have noticed the addition of a "My Book History" link to your account task bar (visible after you log in). For organizational members especially, we recommend viewing My Book History in Table View rather than List View. Then you can see the books you've downloaded as well as sort them by title, date downloaded, and student (organizational memberships only). You can also select a book title in order to download that book again.
Learn more about this update, plus other helpful recent and future improvements, from the recording of our "Bookshare's Latest and Greatest" webinar. The recording is just under one hour in duration, but that includes about 20 minutes of Q&A.

Upcoming Webinars

This month we will be offering two partner webinars. Sign up today and learn about the variety of technology available to your students.
AT Webinar: Bookshare and Texthelp
Wednesday, March 14, 12:00 p.m. PDT, 1:00 p.m. MDT, 2:00 p.m. CDT, 3:00 p.m. EDT
Join Bookshare and Texthelp to learn how to read Bookshare books using Read&Write GOLD and the recently launched Webapps, including the new eBook Reader.
Sign up here.

Thursday, March 22, 12:00 p.m. PDT, 1:00 p.m. MDT, 2:00 p.m. CDT, 3:00 p.m. EDT
Join Bookshare and Cambium Learning Technologies to learn how to read Bookshare books using Kurzweil 3000 and the recently launched Webapp, Firefly.
Sign up here.

New Training Resources

If you haven't discovered our new training resources then take a look! Now K-12 teachers can access a wide range of training materials to use with other teachers, parents and students. Take a peek.
And for teachers-in-training at the post-secondary level we have a fantastic training section called Personnel Development Resource Materials. Find out more here.

Bookshare at Home

Don't forget to get your qualified students their own memberships for home use. This gives your students access to free technology and over 135,000 books! Watch this quick video and find out how easy it is to get them their own Bookshare memberships.
Questions? Please contact us at http://ctsp0.vresp.com/c/?Benetech/10dbb09a83/4c3c4a90b9/5edf5a1173/utm_content=knl%40ebrschools.org&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=www%2Ebookshare%2Eorg%2FcontactUs&utm_campaign=Training Resources Galore%21.
Ideas that Work logo
AT Webinar: Bookshare and Kurzweil

 

Celebrate Bookshare's 10 Year Anniversary

You are invited to help us celebrate. Bookshare turns 10! Join the celebration! In partnership with Don Johnston, Kurzweil, Freedom Scientific, Humanware, Plextalk, Texthelp



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Visual Impairments Specialist Scotlandville Elementary http://lee.ebrschools.org/kathynicholslee
http://www.kathyskids.org
http://teacherweb.com/LA/RobertELeeHigh/MrsMichael/t.aspx
http://mskathyskids.blogspot.com