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A Real Grand Challenge: Designing Technologies for College Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel University of Washington April 6, 2010 Grinnell.

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Presentation on theme: "A Real Grand Challenge: Designing Technologies for College Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel University of Washington April 6, 2010 Grinnell."— Presentation transcript:

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2 A Real Grand Challenge: Designing Technologies for College Students with Disabilities Katherine Deibel University of Washington April 6, 2010 Grinnell College

3 WAS ROBBED!!!!

4 She has worse dirt on me. Funny Janet Stories April 6, 2010 4 Grinnell College

5 What are Grand Challenges? Prevent nuclear terror Engineer better medicines Access to clean water Manage the nitrogen cycle Secure cyberspace Advance health informatics Restore and improve urban infrastructure Make solar energy economical Provide energy from fusion Reverse-engineer the brain Advance personalized learning Carbon sequestration methods Engineer tools of scientific discovery April 6, 2010 5 Grinnell College Federally-recognized critical problems Funding opportunities (NAE, DARPA, NSF, etc.) National Academy of Engineering Grand Challenges:

6 Disability, accessibility, and assistive technologies are critical issues deserving of attention and effort. Why Not Disability? April 6, 2010 6 Grinnell College

7 “…the many challenges faced by designers of “technologies for college students with disabilities and “will discuss who the user population is, what they “experience, and what policies that shape supporting “them. Design approaches like universal design and “inclusive pedagogy will be discussed. Most “importantly, identifying when technology is not the “answer will be covered. Although this talk will apply to “all disabilities, specific focus will be given to reading “disabilities.” Original Talk Abstract April 6, 2010 7 Grinnell College

8 Introduction to Disabilities Statistics Among college students Approaches Accommodations Universal design Inclusive pedagogy Example assistive technology projects Open Issues This Talk April 6, 2010 8 Grinnell College

9 Immobility Excessive sarcasm Blindness Learning disabilities Deafness Autism and Asperger’s Syndrome Dyslexia ADD/HD Chronic health Psychological conditions Q: What are examples of disabilities? April 6, 2010 9 Grinnell College

10 In the US (according to one study): 16% of ages 15 to 64 is disabled 10% of the workforce is disabled 5% of the STEM workforce is disabled 1% of PhDs in STEM are disabled Disability digital divide (another study): 20% report having a disability or chronic condition 51% of disabled go online 74% of not disabled go online Cause: Barriers to access and use of technology Disability Statistics April 6, 2010 10 Grinnell College Sources: Ladner CSEP590A Talk (2008), Pew Internet Study “E-patients With a Disability or Chronic Disease”

11 Aging Population Bubble April 6, 2010 11 Grinnell College

12 Increased enrollments (entering freshmen) 2.3%(1978) 9.8% (1998) Estimates of 4-year undergraduates with disabilities 10.6% (2004) 11.3%(2003) Disabilities Among College Students April 6, 2010 12 Grinnell College Sources: Scott et al, 2003; NSF 2004-316; NCES 2006-184

13 ADD/HD LDs Chronic health issues Q: Disabilities among college students? April 6, 2010 13 Grinnell College

14 Disabilities Among College Students April 6, 2010Grinnell College 14 Learning 55% Mental/Emotional 10% Health 6% Other 5% Mobility 12% Speech 1% Visual 5% Hearing 6% Disabilities of Students Registered with Disability Services at 4-year U.S. Universities in 1998-99 Sources: NCES Report 1999-046

15 Legal obligation Individual with Disabilities Education Act (K-12) Americans with Disabilities Act (18+) Process: Individual provides proof of disability Individual requests disability accommodations through proper channels Negotiation for reasonable accommodations Agreed upon accommodations must be complied with exactly as described (no more, no less) Accommodations April 6, 2010 15 Grinnell College

16 Any limitations to the accommodation approach? Q: Accommodation Approach? April 6, 2010 16 Grinnell College

17 Reacts only to when problems arise Requires complex registration process Viewed by some as unfair / inequitable Only supports those who are registered Problems with Accommodations April 6, 2010 17 Grinnell College

18 Reasons for not registering with disability services? Q: Disabilities and Registration April 6, 2010 18 Grinnell College

19 Cost of registration / confirmation / diagnosis Stigma / ridicule / negative past experiences Unaware of eligibility / disability status Not eligible for accommodations Easier to self-accommodate No appropriate accommodations Accommodations are not helpful Accommodations not possible Disabilities and Registration April 6, 2010 19 Grinnell College

20 Kindle accessibility features Print enlargement Text-to-speech Realities of text-to-speech Poor speech quality (not upgradeable) Limited effectiveness Has to be permitted by publishers (audiobook copyright controversy) Requires sight to turn on / configure speech tools Arizona State University lawsuit Ended pilot program Kindle and Access April 6, 2010 20 Grinnell College

21 Support all people of all abilities in all situations Build accommodations into regular practices Minimizes accommodation requests Proactive instead of reactive Focus on all forms of disabilities Provide benefits for all users regardless of disability Approaches Universal Design Inclusive Education Proactive Approach to Accommodations April 6, 2010 21 Grinnell College

22 Preemptively identify and address potential accessibility issues Example: Wheelchair ramps Easier and cheaper to include at construction time Fit into flow of building instead of as an add-on Better aesthetics Most common users of ramps: PARENTS WITH STROLLERS Universal Design April 6, 2010 22 Grinnell College

23 Preemptively identify and address potential accessibility issues Example: Well-structured XHTML/CSS Easy to parse / manipulate Easier to maintain (no separate accessible page) More likely to meet basic accessibility standards Universal Design April 6, 2010 23 Grinnell College

24 Does universal design mean that blind people should be able to drive cars? Critique by Alan Newell Spend a few minutes at the beginning presenting an engineering puzzle to the audience: You have to make a web browser accessible to someone who can only type with their big toe, and has lost fine motor control over their legs. Reviewer’s comment about an accessibility panel Universal Design: Criticisms April 6, 2010 24 Grinnell College

25 Universal design is an ideal principle Work towards achieving it Keep within reason What is reasonable? Know and follow basic accessibility standards Be aware of who the relevant user population is Identify likely barriers based on population Universal Design: Reality April 6, 2010 25 Grinnell College

26 Universal design applied to teaching Implementation in college: Build accommodations into teaching practices Minimize need for accommodation requests Basic approaches: Maintain classroom artifacts Acknowledge different learning styles Write and say, say and write Note minimal role of technology Inclusive Teaching April 6, 2010 26 Grinnell College

27 Recognize inaccessible but valuable approaches Example: Diagrams in Data Structures Powerful for understanding pointers Great debugging tool Not accessible to the blind / visually-impaired Inclusive teaching approach: Still teach diagrams and notion of Provide alternatives when needed Physical manipulation (pipe cleaners and styrofoam) Acoustic mapping of diagrams (Plumb) Inclusive Teaching April 6, 2010 27 Grinnell College

28 What is assistive technology design like? Enough High-Level! April 6, 2010 28 Grinnell College

29 Susumu Harada Using one’s voice to control a mouse Vocal Joystick / VoiceDraw April 6, 2010 29 Grinnell College

30 Calico: Reading Tools Support (my work) April 6, 2010Grinnell College 30 Diversity in reading disabilities Need for diverse set of tools Too many tools

31 Calico: Reading Tools Support (my work) April 6, 2010Grinnell College 31 Mimic disability professional’s knowledge via AI diagnosis and recommendation techniques

32 EdgeWrite Text Entry April 6, 2010Grinnell College 32 Jacob Wobbrock Text entry for people with motor difficulties PDAs Trackballs Etc. Simple solution: Edges limit stylus movement

33 WebAnywhere April 6, 2010Grinnell College 33 Jeff Bigham Web-based screen reader Free to use Runs on any machine Works in the browser http://webanywhere.cs.washington.edu/wa.php

34 Awareness of disability / accessibility issues? DO-IT http://www.washington.edu/doit Advocate at home / locally Assistive technology limitations Small consumer base / Lack of industry awareness Expensive software Homegrown solutions not always communicated Need for open-source, free platforms for development Optical character recognition Document conversion tools Open Issues April 6, 2010 34 Grinnell College

35 Acknowledgments: Grinnell College, Janet Davis, Henry Walker, Karen McRitchie, Ken Yasuhara, Jeff Bigham, Susumu Harada, Richard Ladner, Jacob Wobbrock For more information, please contact Kate Deibel http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/deibel Thanks April 7, 2010 35 Grinnell College Questions? Comments?


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