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About the DCMP Began in 1958, as the Captioned Films for the Deaf Program – Signed into law by then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower – Provided entertainment.

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Presentation on theme: "About the DCMP Began in 1958, as the Captioned Films for the Deaf Program – Signed into law by then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower – Provided entertainment."— Presentation transcript:

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2 About the DCMP

3 Began in 1958, as the Captioned Films for the Deaf Program – Signed into law by then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower – Provided entertainment films for individuals who were deaf or hard of hearing

4 About the DCMP In the 80’s and 90’s the program changed names twice, to reflect newer media being made accessible – First to Captioned Films/Videos and then to Captioned Media Program

5 About the DCMP Also in the 90’s, the program began providing some titles with Spanish captions – This requirement was removed from the grant after a few years

6 About the DCMP In 2006, the U.S. Department of Education mandated the program to provide services to blind and visually impaired students, and the DCMP was born

7 About the DCMP 2011 brought the reinstatement of the requirement for the DCMP to provide accessible media in Spanish (both captions and description)

8 DCMP Services The Library (English and Spanish) The Learning Center (Currently only available on the English website, although a few items are in Spanish) The Gateway (Links to external content which is likely English only)

9 What are Captioning and Description?

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11 DCMP Library No fees for membership or use Over 4,000 accessible educational media items For students who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind, visually impaired, or deaf-blind in early learning and grades kindergarten through 12 Available instantly online or mailed to members in DVD format

12 DCMP Library – Who Qualifies? Teachers, Librarians, Sign Language Interpreters, Counselors, Administrators and other school personnel Parents and other family members University students and professors within Teacher- and Interpreter-Training Programs Others whose use of the program benefits a qualifying student

13 DCMP Library – Who Qualifies? Clients must be in the U.S. and its territories – or – U.S. military personnel stationed abroad

14 Features of DCMP Educational Media Selected after research of national curricular priorities and user input Formally evaluated by teachers High-quality accessibility features which have been proofed and edited for accuracy

15 Features of DCMP Educational Media An online catalog which allows members to browse by topic or perform a keyword search Lesson guides available for a large number of English titles and some Spanish titles

16 DCMP Media Catalog Divided into 13 main topic areas, such as: – Biographies – Geography – History – Literature – Home and Family – And many more

17 DCMP Media Catalog Each topic is divided into subjects, such as the following for the Literature topic: – Dickens, Charles – English Literature – Fairy Tales – Poe, Edgar Allan – Shakespeare, William – And many more

18 What Else Does DCMP Offer in Spanish? Brochures

19 What Else Does DCMP Offer in Spanish? Posters

20 Demonstration of Registration and Library

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22 Contact Information Described and Captioned Media Program Web: www.dcmp.org | es.dcmp.org Email: info@dcmp.orginfo@dcmp.org Phone: 1-800-237-6213


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