Our focus this semester will be on the development of activities and tools to support learning goals for students with special needs. On this page you'll find everything you need to complete the first few tasks for the semester. Information will be in text and video format. Please make sure to watch all videos and read all text before attempting each task. If you normally skim long passages of text (I'm always guilty of this), this is not the semester to do that. Should you have questions along the way simply email, call, or text: 770-714-5295.
Why can't I say all of this in half the time? Fortunately - you can listen to it in half the time - I highly recommend changing the playback speed to at least 1.5x (also - this is just an overview of the tasks for this unit - all of the instructions you'll need are written out for each task below) Also - that screenshot. This is what happens when June session starts two days after Maymester ends :/
Two tips that might help:
Make a checklist of everything that needs to be completed before you get started. I've used bold text to indicate the "action item" for each of the tasks to make it easier to create a checklist.
You have one week to complete all of these tasks. There are readings, several videos to watch, and a bit of writing. If you wait until the last minute - all the tasks run together and get pretty complicated.
Grade value: 5% of total grade Time Estimate: 45 minutes to 1 hour
One of the most important things for you to do this week is introduce yourself to your classmates and provide us with some background information and your contact information. Although there are no group projects this semester, it's important that you get to know your classmates as much as possible during an online course to make it more meaningful.
STEP ONE: Use Padlet to tell us about yourself.
Go to our class Padlet. Click the + button on the bottom right of the Padlet screen to create your own post - you'll see a place to add a quick video to say hello and help us to pronounce your name correctly. You'll also see some required (and some optional) questions to answer.
Take a few minutes to view your classmates' responses using the same link.
STEP TWO: Complete the Student Information Sheet
Click here to complete the Student Information Sheet. Please make sure to let me know if your contact information changes at any time during the semester.
STEP THREE: Set Up Your Portfolio
You'll need a space to organize all of your work. We're going to use Google Sites to create a portfolio for you to keep all of your work. This is also how I will access all of your work in order to grade it. [If you've taken EDIT 2000 or EDIT 2000e (hi Maymester students!), you can use the same website, just add these 5 new pages OR create a new site but just do it with your same Google login]
**Important note - you can't edit a Google Site unless you are using Google Chrome or Firefox as your browser. But honestly, if you're not using one of these two browsers already - it's time for an upgrade (your life will be better for it, I promise). If you do try to create/edit a site using Safari or Explorer, you'll be sent to the "classic" version of Google Sites and none of my instructions will make any sense.
You likely already have a Google account. If not - please go to google.com and set one up (you'll need it for several things this semester). Once you're set up with a Google account, go to http://sites.google.com/new to create your site. Please note - your UGA login credentials do not provide access to Google Sites so you will, unfortunately, have to use a personal Google account for this task.
**Important note - if you like to tinker with technology to figure it out, the instructions that follow should be sufficient for you to complete this task. If you prefer a tutorial, click here for an excellent overview on how to get started with Google Sites (then follow the instructions below). Ok - but the tutorial does recommend that you choose a template - I recommend you don't. Choose the "Blank Template" option and it will save you lots of frustration and deleting of random text boxes later.
Once you've named your site, you'll want to create 5 pages:
About
Definitions and Policies
Mobility and Accessibility
Communication and Literacy
Academics and Study Skills
Most of your pages will be blank for the time being. On your About page, include a photo of yourself and a brief biography that's about 2-3 paragraphs long. You can see an example of what this might look like here. (Make sure to check out the About page - it has a really cute dog on it.)
Click the Publish button when you are finished. Google Sites will save all of your work - but it won't be viewable publicly until you click the Publish button. If you'd like to see your website like others will see it, click the small arrow on the right side of the Publish button and choose View Published site. This will allow you to see what your actual website address is, too.
If it takes you longer than an hour to complete this activity, please text or email me (don't count the time it takes to pick out a picture and add 30 minutes if you're a perfectionist.)
Post your contact information, including your new portfolio address, to this form. Please note - your portfolio address will be similar to: https://sites.google.com/view/whateveryounamedyoursite
ONE LAST THING BEFORE YOU GO
**If you are currently enrolled in the Learning, Design, and Technology undergraduate certificate or you are interested in enrolling - please complete this short form.
Grade value: 5% of total grade Time Estimate: 1-2 hours (depending on reading speed)
Before we can do much of anything in our course, we need to make sure we all have a basic understanding of some general terms, policies, and definitions related to assistive technology. In this task, you'll read an article, take some notes, and create a study guide for yourself to practice your understanding of this information. Your study guide is not preparing you for a quiz or test, but to use as a reference for future projects, readings, and writing tasks for this course.
Read: Viner, M., Singh, A., & Shaughnessy, M. F. (2020). Assistive Technology to Help Students With Disabilities. In A. Singh, M. Viner, & C. Yeh (Ed.), Special Education Design and Development Tools for School Rehabilitation Professionals (pp. 240-267). IGI Global. (Once you click on the link, you'll need to click the link to either download the full-text PDF or to read the full-text from the website).
Take notes in whatever way you normally do – pay close attention to definitions of terms and information about US federal policies. Note the reasons stated for using assistive technology and why teachers might face challenges in identifying appropriate assistive technology for their students. Try to find one or two "takeaways" from each of the different headings in the reading. You won't be turning in these notes but they will help you to create your study guide – which you are turning in (see step 5).
Add additional information to your notes – explore at least 5 of the 8 US Government Resources listed. Add additional information you find to your notes.
Watch these really short (and interesting) videos about Discovery, Planning, and Assessment (it's a video from Canada but the procedures discussed are very similar to US schools) and 5 Myths of Assistive Technology to fill in some gaps and/or address concerns you might have from your reading. Add to your notes as you see fit. **Both videos have closed captioning – make sure to click the CC icon near the bottom right of the video if they don't start automatically.
Use your notes to create a study/reference guide that you can use for the rest of the semester: it can be a chart, an infographic, a slideshow, a Quizlet (an original one), a simple set of highlighted or color-coded notes – whatever makes the most sense for you.
Add your study/reference guide to your portfolio: Once you've completed your study/reference guide – provide an image, a link, or the embedded Google Doc or Slides (see embedding instructions below) on your Definitions and Policies webpage that you made in Task 1.
Embedding Instructions:
Before you leave your Google Doc/Slides, click on the Share button in the top right corner. In the Share box that pops up, in the "General Access" section at the bottom, click the arrow next to "Restricted" and select "Anyone with the Link" drop-down option. Then click "Done." Please follow these instructions exactly – do not share your Doc/Slides with my email address. If you find you're entering in my email – you're doing it wrong. Here's a really short tutorial video to show you how.
Go to your website, navigate to your Definitions and Policies page, and click the Insert tab on the top right.
Scroll down the Insert menu and select Document or Slides.
Choose your Document or Slides.
You'll need to do this each time you embed a new Google Document (or Slides or Spreadsheet) on your website.
DON'T FORGET TO CLICK THE BLUE PUBLISH BUTTON!!!
Grade value: 5% of total grade - Time Estimate: 1-2 hours (depending on reading /listening speed)
Listen to a Podcast about ADA: In your reading in Task 2, you should have come across information about the 1990 passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (likely from looking over resources in Appendix C). NPR's Throughline has an excellent podcast on the 30th anniversary of the passage of the act (It was passed during the summer before I started UGA as an undergraduate). It's an hour-long podcast and I'd just like you to listen to it while you're taking a walk, sitting outside somewhere pleasant, or just taking a break somewhere. If you prefer to read the transcript, that's available, too (but still sit outside somewhere pleasant). Please don't skip this task just because there isn't a quiz - this podcast does a great job of helping give context to what is simply a sentence or two in your readings so far.
Podcast link (you can also use any podcast app and search for Throughline - the name of the specific episode is: ADA Now!
Read about Person First Language: You'll be writing a number of short reflections and summaries this semester and it's important for you to have a style guide to assist you. However, the style guide I'd like for you to use is not The Elements of Style or the MLA Handbook (we actually don't even use MLA in the College of Ed - we are all APA in Aderhold), it's a People First style guide distributed by the Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities. This style guide has nothing to do with being politically correct and everything to do with affording everyone the same respect when we make references in a reflection or summary. Please make sure to refer to this style guide as you are writing anything for our course and whenever you make reference to a person with disabilities. But also understand that people have the right to decide how they are to be "described" by others - so this People First guide is just that, a guide, but we should be comfortable with individuals choosing their descriptors. And most importantly, take a few minutes to read this article from Special Olympics and watch this short video to learn more about Rosa's Law and why the words we use matters.
Reflect on what you learned: What did you learn from the podcast? From the style guide and Special Olympics article? What context did the first-person accounts of the passage of the ADA bring to your understanding of the law? What's changed about references you'll use after reviewing the People First style guide and Special Olympics article/video? Write a short reflection that answers these questions (if you want to know how long a reflection should be - use your current age as a guide for the average number of sentences you'll write - or somewhere around 20 - but please don't count your sentences (I won't) just write about what you learned). You can write this directly on your Definitions and Policies page or write it on a Google Doc that is then inserted onto your Definitions and Policies page. **Should you choose to insert a Google Doc - review the directions for this found at the end of Task 2. And don't forget to click the PUBLISH button on your site!
Grade value: 5% of total grade Time estimate 30-45 minutes
Take a few minutes to think about tools you use to get your academic work completed - how many of those tools could be considered assistive technology? Would any of the tools you used to create your study/resource guide in Task 2 be considered assistive technology tools?
For this task, create a short slide deck to give us a brief tour of the assistive technology that supports your own learning goals. Here's how to do it:
Identify an example of a low-tech, a mid-tech, and a high-tech tool that you personally use.
Create one slide for each tool for a total of 3 slides. Each slide should include: a picture of the tool, taken by you, a 3-4 sentence explanation detailing how that specific tool supports your learning, and a caption for each slide, stating the type of tool (e.g., "Low-tech tool") and explaining why you chose it.
Once you've finished your slides, you'll need to insert them onto your Definitions and Policies webpage. Follow the same directions you used for inserting your Google Doc in Task 3. The only difference is that you're inserting a Slide instead of a Doc. Just make sure it's been shared properly (look for that globe icon on the SHARE button!). And, as always, don't forget to click the PUBLISH button on your site!
This is what the table of contents icon looks like that you'll use to get to Ch. 4
Grade value: 8% of total grade Time Estimate: 2 hours
At the end of each unit, you'll be asked to connect the work you've done with the readings you've completed and the principles of Universal Design for Learning (never heard of it? no worries - you're going to read about it in a minute).
Read about UDL - To get a bit of background on UDL (or as a review for those of you taking other education courses), you'll need to read Meyer, A., Gordon, D., & Rose, D. H. (2014). Chapter 4: Universal Design for Learning. In Universal Design for Learning: theory and practice (1st ed., pp. 83–108), Cast Incorporated.
Accessing the Reading - The easiest way to access the reading is to buy the book -which we really don't want, or need to do. So to get to their free version, they make us jump through a few hoops (just tell yourself it's like getting paid $60 to click a few extra links.)
Start out here: https://clusive.cast.org/res_reader/UDLTP
Click on the Create a Free Account link in the login box. It's really important that you choose the "I'm a teacher" option on the next screen or none of these other instructions will work.
Create your account and then verify your account by clicking the link they'll email you.
Finally, log in and you should be able to view the textbook. Use the table of contents icon on the left side of the screen to access Chapter 4 as it doesn't show page numbers. Weird that this is a book about accessibility and they make it kind of difficult to access.
Once you actually get to the text, the web version has some nice accessibility features that might be useful to you. I particularly like the option to have any text that you highlight read to you. You're basically just reading all of Chapter 4 – and there are videos included that you are not required to view but might help to explain UDL a bit better. If you have any issues accessing the text - let me know and I can help with access.
Write about UDL - After reading about the 3 principles of UDL, reviewing your study/resource guide from Task 2, and thinking about your readings and work from Tasks 3 and 4 – write about your understanding of Universal Design for Learning and the role it plays in learning for all students. Think about your personal learning needs – which of the three principles of UDL is really important to you? What's an example of a time you were provided with the opportunity to have multiple means of representation, action/expression, or engagement? How do the three tools that you talked about in Task 4 support one or more of these principles? Your finished document should be 3-4 paragraphs.
Add your work to your portfolio: Insert your Google Doc onto your Definitions and Policies page – following the same directions as found in the previous tasks – look for the globe icon on the SHARE button to ensure you've shared the document correctly. Also, don't forget to click the PUBLISH button on your site!