Show and Tell
Assistive technology allows students
with disabilities, the chance to be independent. Depending on the disability, students
can type out their notes on a laptop, or use voice recognition programs to take
the notes for them. Features such as this allows the teacher and students to continue
to focus on the lesson at hand.
As an educator, I would introduce some
assistive technology to mu class by assigning a project. The project I would choose
is show and tell. The students will be
required to bring in a form of technology or a picture of how the object looks
that they used in every day. All students would show and teach their fellow
peers what technological devices they use and the basic functions of it. The
activity would involve students with disabilities, and this would be an
opportunity for the student to educate the students common items we all use
but, how it helps them and their disability (George., 2005). This way the students
become the teacher, and they get an understanding of how each other’s lives are
outside of school.
The criteria I would use can be
found in Reading Horizons: Show-and-Tell:
Assessing Oral Language Abilities by Gary Bohning. The students will have
to focus on the three categories, which are defining the object, clarifying the
object or the experience when using the object, and qualifying the object or
the experience when using the object (1981, pp 45-46). Grading will also be done by the grading
based off the assessment scale of 1-5 (see picture below, p.47).
One of the many types of assistive
technology that I am familiar with, is a hearing aid. My grandmother, grew the
need to have one, due to hearing deficits that develop through old age. Without
the hearing, my grandmother would not have been able to communicate
effectively. She would look as if she is trying her hardest to make out what
someone was saying, and she typically inform me by yelling, “HA?” With her
hearing aid, she did not have to lean in to the speaker, or have to say HA, OR
Huh as frequently. Also, with her hearing aid she was able to talk on the phone
without yelling at the receiver of the call. Thanks to assistive technology I
was able to have conversations with my grandmother easily. Assistive technology
changes the lives of children, students and adults.
George Lucas
Educational Foundation., Edutopia. (2005). How Assistive Technology Enables
Dreams. Retrieved April 13, 2018, from https://www.edutopia.org/video/how-assistive-technology-enables-dream
Bohning, G. (1981).
Show-and-tell: Assessing oral language abilities. Reading Horizons. 22(1), 43-48.

Hi:
ReplyDeleteNicely written
-j-