Special Educators: Leading Apps and Services for Special Education

Similar documents
Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Handbook. Smackover-Norphlet School District

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Usage and Network Access Guidelines. Rules and Requirements

Bright Local Schools BYOD Acceptable Use Policy

3" "$ #$# #"# &() $ " " &'$!# $ " &' *+ " $ &/!" $ &

Definition Purpose Bring Your Own Device required Guidelines Responsibility for Devices

Clarity High School Student Survey

ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY FOR CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES

Combined with the right instruction and used responsibly, technologies in learning can serve as:

Clarity Middle School Survey

BYOD in NSW Public Schools

How To Understand The Bring Your Own Device To School Policy At A School

Q1 Which school do you attend?

Hillsborough County Public Schools provides a wireless network which students may connect to while using their devices in the building.

Abilene Independent School District. Bring Your Own Device Handbook

Susan Bigman Assistive Technology Services Fairfax County Public Schools BYOD* What Can it Mean for Me? *Bring Your Own Device

Bring Your Own Technology Guide (BYOT) Student & Parent Guide for Best Practices

JHMS PERSONAL ELECTRONIC DEVICE POLICY

The Special Education Technology Center of Washington State

UPDATE: Electronic Book and ereader Device Report March 2011

Clare Middle School. Which should I bring? PLAN

Mobile Technology. National Survey on. for K-12 Education. Sponsored by Amplify. Research Report Educator Edition 2013

Welcome. BYOD Parent Information Meeting

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)

Iowa Park CISD BYOD Policy

BRING YOUR OWN DEVICE (BYOD)

West Ada School District Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Program. BYOD Guide August 2014 PURPOSE ACCESS THEFT, LOSS OR DAMAGE

Device: Refers to any technology that boys bring to use to connect to the school wireless network in the BYOD Program.

Regional School District No. 7. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) and Protocol for the Use of Technology in the Schools

Note: Survey responses are based upon the number of individuals that responded to the specific question. Response Responses Responses

Northwest Community Schools Bring Your Own Device Program Policy

Board of Education Procedure 9.21a Findlay City School District

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Policy Revised: April 2012

District Technology Guidelines. for Students and Parents/Guardians, updated for

By the nature of the BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) program, there is not a list of approved devices.

BYOD program at St Julian s School

Electronic Book and e-reader Device Report

Authorization for Electronic Network Access AUP and BYOD Policies DEFINITIONS. BYOD Bring Your Own Device. AUP Authorized Use Policy

From the Superintendent...

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Purpose

Teaching New Sellers about ebay Selling Limits and Payment Holds. Griff Dean of ebay Education

eclass A Teaching and Learning Initiative

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) and Mobile Device Management. tekniqueit.com

Parent & Student Guide

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) and Mobile Device Management.

The IEP is written by a Team. The Team works together, collaborates, and decides by consensus not by vote. Everyone on the team has an equal voice.

Choose Your Own Device (CYOD) and Mobile Device Management. gsolutionz.com

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) to School

BYOD Mobile Device Chart

Triad Local School District Bring Your Own Device Student Device User Agreement F1

Bring your own Device (BYOD) for Learning

Bring Your Own Device Hilltop School

SPRING VALLEY MIDDLE-HIGH SCHOOL. Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Guidelines

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Student, Teacher and Parent Guide

Student Contract for Use of Cell Phones and Other Electronic Devices

Technology, Expanding the Classroom Andrew Smith Secondary Mathematics Teacher William H. Spencer High School Muscogee County 10:00 11:45

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Years 5 and 6. Sunnyhills School

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) and Mobile Device Management


BRING YOUR OWN DEVICE (BYOD) AND MOBILE DEVICE MANAGEMENT

St Mark s Church School (Version 2) Bring Your Own Device Policy

ISD. What is BYOD? Hooks Independent School District

The road to 1:1 / BYOD in Alvarado ISD. Kyle Berger Executive Director of Technology

Btech IT SECURITY SERVICES. Financial Mobility Balancing Security and Success

Maypearl ISD. Bring Your Own Device (B.Y.O.D.)

2014, Project Tomorrow Page 1 Speak Up 2014 District Administrator Survey Questions

Cloud and Mobile Computing A Higher Education Perspective. Brian Stewart AVU ODL-PD Program Nairobi 16 th 2013

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Sheboygan Falls Schools BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) Student and Parent Guide

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)

Pearson Student Mobile Device Survey 2014

Bring Your Own Technology Procedures

HCISD A Digital District High Access BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) District Guidelines

Policy for Staff and Post 16 Student BYOD (Bring Your Own Device)

Children s Media Use and Attitudes Report Section 4 Children s take-up of media

8 Benefits of BYOD. Sponsored by Webanywhere Ltd. Telephone: Web:

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Policy - Students SDS-22

BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) Guidelines

Who Needs Parental Controls?

A Visual Task Manager Application for Individuals with Autism

1 PEW RESEARCH CENTER

How To Make A Cloud Based Computer System Work For You

Financial Win or Loss?

Pedagogy ARCHITECTURE:

BYOD in the Workplace

BYOD Acceptable Use BYOD = Bring Your Own Device

Year (Freshman Senior) Gender Age Region Major of study. 25 minute online survey

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Guidelines Gettys Middle School

IT Quick Reference Guides How to Find Your MAC Address

Mercy Technology Update. March 7, 2012

2011 Technology Presentation Bexley City Schools Board of Education. Paul Ross Technology Director

The City University of New York Office of Institutional Research and Assessment.

Acceptable Use Guidelines

Sheldon College Bring Your Own Device

Continuous Quality Improvement Through Professional Development For Online K-12 Instructors

Digital Technologies Current and Potential Impact on Education. Abstract. Richard S. Bartolowits. Boise State University Graduate Student

E-reader Ownership Doubles in Six Months

THE 411 FOR TEACHERS

Institutional positioning for mobile learning initiatives at RMIT. Garry Allan

BEYOND BOUNDARIES AND INTO THE UNIVERSE OF ACCESS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A UNIVERSAL DESIGN TEAM TO EMPOWER ALL STRUGGLING READERS AND WRITERS

TOOLS for DEVELOPING Communication PLANS

Transcription:

Special Educators: Leading Apps and Services for Special Education Amy S. Goldman, MS, CCC-Speech/L Co-Executive Director, Institute on Disabilities Temple University Facilitator

Today s Distinguished Panel Susan Mazrui, Director, Public Policy, AT&T. Lauren S. Enders, Augmentative Communication Consultant/Assistive Technology Consultant/Speech- Language Pathologist. Joan Green, Founder, Innovative Speech Therapy. Jim Tobias, President, Inclusive Technologies. Sang-Mook Lee, Associate Professor, and Chief Research Officer, Seoul National University.

Assistive Technology Any product, item, system, whether manufactured or fabricated (e.g. by a parent or therapist), whether specialized or generic, used to improve the independence/function of a person with a disability. Devices and the services necessary to evaluate, match, repair/maintain, and USE the device.

Mobile Technologies: A Game Changer Move from specialized, dedicated assistive devices to generic, everyday, ubiquitous technologies. Price point is do-able for many ( out of pocket ). Shift from professional control to consumer control.

Challenges and Opportunities Street value Matching technology to the user Services needed for implementation Off label use need for accessories ($) Expands digital divide Impact on AT industry Reduced stigma Funding barriers reduced or eliminated for many May introduce consideration of AT, even if the generic device is not the final selection

BYOT/BYOD Bring your own device (business) consumerization of IT ; connection of personal devices to the corporate network Bring your own technology (education) http://byotnetwork.com/ integrating student-owned technology within the learning environment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ljgxgcfyqzy&feature=player_embedded#!

Sample Policies Students may bring personal technology devices to school if they choose. Participation is completely voluntary. The school is not responsible for lost, stolen, or damaged devices. Personal technology includes, but is not limited to, cell phones, smartphones, laptops, tablet devices, Netbooks, notebooks, ipads, ipods, Kindles, NOOKs, PDAs, mp3 players, wireless earpieces, and portable gaming devices. Students should keep their personal devices on mute. Phone calls and text messages should not interrupt instruction. For accountability, students must register their personal technology devices at http://byot.svsd.net before connecting to the school s wireless system. Students are responsible for supporting their own personal devices. Staff will not provide students with support for how to use their own devices. Students without personal technology devices will not be excluded from educational activities. If personal technology is used as an aid to classroom instruction, the teacher will make use of the technology devices present, possibly pairing students or placing them into groups. Seneca Valley School District, Harmony, PA

Mobile Technologies, BYOT and Learners with Disabilities Who are learners with disabilities? The Connected Child Mobile technology deployment for learners with disabilities (including but not limited to BYOT) Matching technology to the learner: finding and using apps; being a wise consumer in the app world

Mobile Technologies, BYOT and Learners with Disabilities Implications for device and app developers accessibility, universal design, and universal design for learning The world view of deployment of mobile technologies and learners with disabilities Q&A

FOR INFORMATION contact: PIAT - Pennsylvania s Initiative on Assistive Technology, a program of the Institute on Disabilities, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA Tel: 800-204-7428 (voice) 866-268-0579 (TTY) Fax: 215-204-9371 Email: ATinfo@temple.edu Web: http://disabilities.temple.edu/piat To locate YOUR state s AT Act program: www.resnaprojects.org