Technology Supports for Students with
Learning Disabilities
By John Lubert, Strategic Technology Planner, Provincial Schools
Branch
A grade ten student walks into the computer lab and sits down at
a computer station with her English assignment. She takes her novel
and inserts it into a scanner, presses a button and puts on her
headset with microphone. The words of the novel appear on the monitor,
and the student clicks the mouse. The computer begins to read the
novel, highlighting each word on the screen as it moves from left
to right. The student clicks the mouse again and begins to dictate
the answer to one of the homework questions. A "sticky note"
with her answer appears on the screen. She hesitates, trying to
find just the right word. She clicks the mouse again and suggested
words appear on the screen and are read to her. She picks the one
she likes best. Forty minutes later, she saves her work to disk,
and leaves the lab with her homework completed, knowing it has been
checked for grammar and spelling.
This is not on the Starship Enterprise. It is in Cathy Paul's Demonstration
School in London Ontario. Cathy has been integrating text-to-speech,
speech-to-text, word prediction, and organizational software into
the school programs of students with severe learning disabilities
with great success since 1997.
In the early grades, children in school learn to read. After about
grade four, the structure of our school system expects them to read
to learn. Children with reading difficulties will begin to experience
program gaps as the pace of the learning increases.
Computer technology can help students with learning disabilities
keep up with the content while good teaching continues to address
the skill deficits that hamper the child's reading and writing
The software programs that assist the students at Amethyst to compensate
for their reading and writing deficits are grouped under the heading
of Adaptive Technology (AT). AT are compensatory tools that allow
students with learning disabilities to perform tasks on the computer
that they ordinarily have difficulty with, typically reading and
writing. Adaptive Technology circumvents decoding and encoding so
that students are able to work in content areas without struggling
with the reading and writing in those subjects.
AT for students with learning disabilities often refers to either
text-to-speech or speech-to-text programs.
Text-to-speech programs work in combination with scanning equipment
to scan print material into the computer using Optical Character
Recognition (OCR) software that enables the computer to recognize
the millions of different combinations of type fonts and sizes as
distinct letters. The text-to-speech software can then read the
words as sentences that students with severe learning disabilities
can understand as speech. In the better text-to-speech software,
students can control the type of voice, the speed, pitch, and volume.
They can have a word repeated, or spelled letter by letter. Highlighting
can be by the word or by the paragraph.
Speech-to-text programs, sometimes called speech recognition programs,
take spoken words and translate them into text or actions. As the
program "learns" how the user speaks, recognition improves.
For students who have difficulty with written production, students
for whom other methods of completing written work have been unsuccessful,
or students whose oral skills are better than handwritten and keyboarding
skills, speech recognition can be an effective tool.
A significant obstacle to the implementation of appropriate AT
with students who have learning disabilities is a lack of awareness
and training. Education must occur at a number of different levels:
- First, we need awareness. Many students, parents and teachers
simply do not know that this technology exists, and that it can
work.
- Second, we need professional development for the educational
community to learn how to determine which children can benefit
from AT, and prescribe the best programs for each child. They
need support in accessing funding for AT through vehicles like
the ISA programs.
- Third, teachers need training in how to use the software, how
to teach students with learning disabilities to use it effectively,
and how to integrate AT into the curriculum so that increased
student learning occurs.
One board on the right track is the Durham District School Board,
who have a learning disabilities facilitator, Gail Ivanco, who is
an experienced advocate for AT. Gail is in constant demand as a
speaker and presenter, as well as assisting her colleagues in understanding
AT and how to appropriately and effectively implement these learning
supports for students with learning disabilities.
For more information on AT, go to the Special Needs Opportunity
Windows website (SNOW) at http://snow.utoronto.ca
or the Amethyst Scholl website at:http://www.Amethyst.tzo.net.
For information on ISA funding go to: http://mettowas21.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/funding/T4-old.pdf.

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