This is a curriculum I first developed when I was a student teacher. I was amazed at how much needed to be changed to make it more UDL friendly. Some parts till need to be fleshed out, but I'm pretty pleased with it so far! Even learned some cool new technology tricks!
Genius in your Genes!
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Monday, May 12, 2008
is there such a thing as TOO MUCH?
I woke up at 3 this morning. Why? Who knows. Except I remember having a very complicated dream about html and my T560 project design. Too bad I can't remember now how my dream-self did a couple of the cool things it did! Have I been spending too much time on this? As long as I'm awake, I might as well do some more work! heh heh heh...
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Viddler and Downloading Streaming Video
Videos on Viddler actually can be downloaded, as can most anything streaming. You need the latest version of RealPlayer (11.something), and when you mouseover a playing video, you will get a tab above it asking if you want to download the video. It will also work on YouTube and almost anywhere else. A few places (like lectures on GSE's streaming server) won't work...there is a way for them to turn off the downloadable feature, but it isn't generally available.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
more thoughts on audio books
I started listening to a new book today, and was startled by the use of accents for certain characters, which got me thinking about what purpose they play in a story. In this story, the characters were from different countries, so their accents reinforced that and actually helped in keeping certain points of the plot together (which characters were from the same place, etc.) That is one thing that is definitely hard to replicate when one is reading from text, or with a screen reader. I've seen a few books where the author does an admirable job of writing certain character's dialogue more or less phonetically, but only a few, and only for a couple characters who were supposed to have pronounced accents. A few years ago I took a TESL (Teaching English as a Second Language) course, and one of the activities was to 'translate' into written English some sentences that were written in a phonetic alphabet, and also to 'translate' some written English sentences into there phonetic written equivalent. We had to identify our region and what dialect we spoke, since the accent changed how one would pronounce certain words. This is a depth that totally falls away in written text...the nuances of regional accents. Anyway, it was interesting to muse about the effect of accents on the processing of the story...
Saturday, April 12, 2008
streamlining notes
Hello All,
I've noticed some of the notes people have posted on the course site or their blogs include multiple files...one for each page they scanned of their notes. I took 3 of those sets and turned them into single pdf files...thought I'd post them here if anyone wants them. I find it helps keep my folders less cluttered, to combine pages. For those using scanners in the GCA, or wants to do this to their notes...it's really easy to do with Adobe Professional. You can make a single PDF document out of just about any file type, or combination of file types. Here's how:
Open Adobe Professional
Choose "Create PDF"
Choose "Create PDF from multiple files"
Select the files you want to use
Reorder the files if necessary
Click "next"
Click "create"
Save the combined file
Anyway, I posted notes from Val, Laurel, and Prim on the course isite.
If anyone wants their T560 scanned notes combined like this, I can do it for you too, if you send me the individual files! dunhamka @ gse...
I've noticed some of the notes people have posted on the course site or their blogs include multiple files...one for each page they scanned of their notes. I took 3 of those sets and turned them into single pdf files...thought I'd post them here if anyone wants them. I find it helps keep my folders less cluttered, to combine pages. For those using scanners in the GCA, or wants to do this to their notes...it's really easy to do with Adobe Professional. You can make a single PDF document out of just about any file type, or combination of file types. Here's how:
Open Adobe Professional
Choose "Create PDF"
Choose "Create PDF from multiple files"
Select the files you want to use
Reorder the files if necessary
Click "next"
Click "create"
Save the combined file
Anyway, I posted notes from Val, Laurel, and Prim on the course isite.
If anyone wants their T560 scanned notes combined like this, I can do it for you too, if you send me the individual files! dunhamka @ gse...
Friday, April 11, 2008
Now you have it, now you don't...
A friend sent me this interesting podcast about a brain scientiest about her stroke, and studying the brain from the inside out!
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Audio Book Thoughts.
I've been thinking a lot about Liz's post a couple of weeks ago about listening to someone read, and whether it makes it better if the author is the one who is reading, since they would know best what the affect is supposed to be. It is certainly an interesting thought, though I think many people still would prefer to add their own affect anyway, since that is part of the enjoyment!
When I was in elementary and high school I read TONS of books. In the last 3 or so years I've started listening to a lot of audio books, due to the development of vision trouble. Since I grew up reading books and adding my own interpretations, and I'm not blind, I don't think that my experiences are very representative of how blind people typically feel about audio books, but I do appreciate the storytelling feel of having a narrator. The thing that trips *me* up is that sometimes several books that I want to listen to are narrated by the same person, who dutifully creates different voices for each character in a book, then then reuses some of those voices for other books! I've found myself stopping my iPod, and trying to figure out how I changed stories w/o knowing it, only to realize that I'm still in the right story, the narrator is just reusing a character voice that I've heard before.
It could be interesting to experiment with different people reading the same passage and see how listeners feel about the different voices. In most screen readers you can choose among several voices, and the same for GPS navigation systems. Sometimes people choose one voice over another because they have a hard time with a cerain range of tones, or they want to listen to something with an accent (do people who rely on screenreaders for information like the accents?). I recall reading a study about the selection of voices for GPS navigators...specifically that they favored male voices because women don't mind as much hearing directions from men (or male voices) and men DO mind hearing directions for women (or female voices). Though, in constrast, the only person I know who uses a GPS navigator regularly is a guy, and he prefers the female voice and has named her 'natalie'. Goes to show that a trend is a trend, but not representative of EVERYONE! I wonder what goes into our preferences for different voices?
When I was in elementary and high school I read TONS of books. In the last 3 or so years I've started listening to a lot of audio books, due to the development of vision trouble. Since I grew up reading books and adding my own interpretations, and I'm not blind, I don't think that my experiences are very representative of how blind people typically feel about audio books, but I do appreciate the storytelling feel of having a narrator. The thing that trips *me* up is that sometimes several books that I want to listen to are narrated by the same person, who dutifully creates different voices for each character in a book, then then reuses some of those voices for other books! I've found myself stopping my iPod, and trying to figure out how I changed stories w/o knowing it, only to realize that I'm still in the right story, the narrator is just reusing a character voice that I've heard before.
It could be interesting to experiment with different people reading the same passage and see how listeners feel about the different voices. In most screen readers you can choose among several voices, and the same for GPS navigation systems. Sometimes people choose one voice over another because they have a hard time with a cerain range of tones, or they want to listen to something with an accent (do people who rely on screenreaders for information like the accents?). I recall reading a study about the selection of voices for GPS navigators...specifically that they favored male voices because women don't mind as much hearing directions from men (or male voices) and men DO mind hearing directions for women (or female voices). Though, in constrast, the only person I know who uses a GPS navigator regularly is a guy, and he prefers the female voice and has named her 'natalie'. Goes to show that a trend is a trend, but not representative of EVERYONE! I wonder what goes into our preferences for different voices?
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
My Notes from class April 7
T560 Notes
Monday, April 7, 2008
We tend to think of educational needs like a medical model--triage...but this neglects the change in medicine away
from crisis management to public health model that figures out what triggers the problem and then try to prevent it.
Education needs to work on anticipatory aids rather than patching things up when the fail totally for someone.
curriculum is non-responsive to individual differences
What is different about images? Art does not read like a sentence. you see the whole, as well as details.
different to view the parts from the whole...can view the parts sequentially and separately, but also SIMULTANEOUSLY
view the whole--(picture of sitting room and chair). A blind person can only see things point by point, so need to
find ways presenting two-handed information...one hand gets the whole picture, the other details.
text tends to be sequential, which is better than oral, which is sequential and time-locked.
images are good for
1) representing concrete objects or settings
2) representing the relationships between objects or ideas: illustrating or capturing their relationships--concept
maps, etc.
3) representing the relationship between things and their context--maintain both figure and ground
4) capturing simultaneity: eg. parts and wholes simultaneously
5) direct representation: not encoded, fairly direct and accessible
can recognize things in context--parallel info. actually facilitates, makes it easier to recognize in context,
plate on table, letters vs. words vs. sentence--priming effect. ex. two concentric ovals don't mean much alone,
but when placed in line drawing of table, silverware, chair, we suddenly realize it is a plate.
context processers
brain separates elements of an image...color, motion, even objects...like faces, processes them in different areas.
Damage to one area inhibits processing of the associated element
web site Face Blind--bill's face blindness pages http://www.choisser.com/faceblind
damage to the part of the brain the processes faces. he uses other cues to identify people. didn't know until he
was an adult that other people recognized others by their faces!
illusions as top-down constraints on understanding images--size, shadow, background knowledge about orientation,
etc.
background knowledge--old picture (damage) man, officer, military (inferred from clothes, hair, etc.)
alternate means of representation--
image to tactile transformation
tactile diagrams
finding how to translate images into *meaningful* tactile representations. Picture of woman in a dress, with raised
surfaces, does not translate to a dress for the blind people who tested it.
images...using words to describe...are we describing it for? what is a house? what else is meaningful or not to
them? making it tactile does not always communicate the content though.
have to know the purpose for which you are describing it before you can do it before it is meaningful. making the
content accessible should not delete the goal of the activity. Federal style house...if the goal is to count the
windows, should not say "there are 13 windows"!
start with the broad overview--big picture in context
focus on a few relevant details--see purpose
describe relationships and comparisons, facts
leave interpretations to the observer
image detective--website for how to strategically look at images.
*******************************************
Final Project
cast lesson plan builder, especially for those who haven't made lessons before
UDL lessons start out detailed, but as you do more, they don't need to be quite so explicit
there are existing lesson plans online to look at as examples
can download Word template to fill in offline
what is an anticipatory set? thinking about what you are doing and how you set the stage for the lesson. what
background knowledge do the students have or need?
lab 3--should be getting feedback this week if you haven't already
lab 4 due next Monday
sections--Rachel and Yvonne will be doing one on turning lessons into UDL lessons--workshop format, so bring
projects and can have open discussion
Chris and Bart will be doing section on using images
for final project proposal, will be getting feedback this week. rubric will be posted
if you have trouble viewing the webpage, e-mail peter to get access to the documents
look at each other's book builder projects
final project due may 12
Monday, April 7, 2008
We tend to think of educational needs like a medical model--triage...but this neglects the change in medicine away
from crisis management to public health model that figures out what triggers the problem and then try to prevent it.
Education needs to work on anticipatory aids rather than patching things up when the fail totally for someone.
curriculum is non-responsive to individual differences
What is different about images? Art does not read like a sentence. you see the whole, as well as details.
different to view the parts from the whole...can view the parts sequentially and separately, but also SIMULTANEOUSLY
view the whole--(picture of sitting room and chair). A blind person can only see things point by point, so need to
find ways presenting two-handed information...one hand gets the whole picture, the other details.
text tends to be sequential, which is better than oral, which is sequential and time-locked.
images are good for
1) representing concrete objects or settings
2) representing the relationships between objects or ideas: illustrating or capturing their relationships--concept
maps, etc.
3) representing the relationship between things and their context--maintain both figure and ground
4) capturing simultaneity: eg. parts and wholes simultaneously
5) direct representation: not encoded, fairly direct and accessible
can recognize things in context--parallel info. actually facilitates, makes it easier to recognize in context,
plate on table, letters vs. words vs. sentence--priming effect. ex. two concentric ovals don't mean much alone,
but when placed in line drawing of table, silverware, chair, we suddenly realize it is a plate.
context processers
brain separates elements of an image...color, motion, even objects...like faces, processes them in different areas.
Damage to one area inhibits processing of the associated element
web site Face Blind--bill's face blindness pages http://www.choisser.com/faceblind
damage to the part of the brain the processes faces. he uses other cues to identify people. didn't know until he
was an adult that other people recognized others by their faces!
illusions as top-down constraints on understanding images--size, shadow, background knowledge about orientation,
etc.
background knowledge--old picture (damage) man, officer, military (inferred from clothes, hair, etc.)
alternate means of representation--
image to tactile transformation
tactile diagrams
finding how to translate images into *meaningful* tactile representations. Picture of woman in a dress, with raised
surfaces, does not translate to a dress for the blind people who tested it.
images...using words to describe...are we describing it for? what is a house? what else is meaningful or not to
them? making it tactile does not always communicate the content though.
have to know the purpose for which you are describing it before you can do it before it is meaningful. making the
content accessible should not delete the goal of the activity. Federal style house...if the goal is to count the
windows, should not say "there are 13 windows"!
start with the broad overview--big picture in context
focus on a few relevant details--see purpose
describe relationships and comparisons, facts
leave interpretations to the observer
image detective--website for how to strategically look at images.
*******************************************
Final Project
cast lesson plan builder, especially for those who haven't made lessons before
UDL lessons start out detailed, but as you do more, they don't need to be quite so explicit
there are existing lesson plans online to look at as examples
can download Word template to fill in offline
what is an anticipatory set? thinking about what you are doing and how you set the stage for the lesson. what
background knowledge do the students have or need?
lab 3--should be getting feedback this week if you haven't already
lab 4 due next Monday
sections--Rachel and Yvonne will be doing one on turning lessons into UDL lessons--workshop format, so bring
projects and can have open discussion
Chris and Bart will be doing section on using images
for final project proposal, will be getting feedback this week. rubric will be posted
if you have trouble viewing the webpage, e-mail peter to get access to the documents
look at each other's book builder projects
final project due may 12
Monday, March 31, 2008
Technology in Education
Here is an interesting article a friend sent to me, about the advancement of technology, particularly as it affect the development of education.
Click here for the article
Click here for the article
My First Book!
Well, maybe not my first book, but my first digital book! This is the story of two teddy bears that belong to my mom. They like to travel, and get into mischief. The story itself has been under development for a while...this is just the beginning. Enjoy!
Click here to see the book!
Click here if you want to download it!
Click here to see the book!
Click here if you want to download it!
Friday, March 14, 2008
Forget text-to-speech...how about THOUGHT to speech?!?!
Wonders never cease. Check out this article about a new device for translating THOUGHTS into speech! Maybe we'll eventually see a decrease in the number of people who appear to be talking to themselves while walking down the street...
http://technology.newscientist.com/article/dn13449-nervetapping-neckband-allows-telepathic-chat.html
http://technology.newscientist.com/article/dn13449-nervetapping-neckband-allows-telepathic-chat.html
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Super Cool Instructional Video
I'll teach you in less than 4 minutes how to make homemade bread, without a bread machine!
I used my digital camera to take pictures of the process.
I used Adobe Photoshop to add text to the photos and to create the slides.
I used Audacity to record and edit the sound.
I used Final Cut Pro to sync the images and sound.
I used my digital camera to take pictures of the process.
I used Adobe Photoshop to add text to the photos and to create the slides.
I used Audacity to record and edit the sound.
I used Final Cut Pro to sync the images and sound.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Too many blogs to keep track of?
For those who find keeping up with the 60+ blogs of your T560 classmates overwhelming, check out www.bloglines.com . Once you register at this site, you can add 'feeds' from blogger, or any other site that uses feeds (other blogging tools, news feeds, etc.). Then, you log in to bloglines and can view all of the posts by any (or all) of your feeds updated since the last time you logged in, or in a specific time period (last 6 hours, last week, all...). This is nice because you don't waste time clicking through a bunch of pages that haven't been updated. You can also search all of your feeds, and/or the rest of the web for key words, so if you want to see who else in the class has posted about neural nets, you search for 'neural nets' and it will list all the entries containing those keywords, reguardless of when the post was made. I used this search feature when I wanted to find a video one of you had posted, but I didn't remember who it was! If you want to view the actual blog site, or post a comment, the blog entry is hyperlinked to the actual site, so you can get there in one click. You can also mark entries to keep in your display, so you can see them as 'new' the next time you log in. It's a pretty helpful little gadget, in my humble opinion! And saves me a lot of frustration over tedium!
Friday, February 29, 2008
Some thoughts on affect
During class last week I was reminded of a chapter in a book by Oliver Sacks. The book is called "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat" and contains chapters about different patients with different neurological disorders and what life looked like for each of them. The chapters I was reminded of is called "The President's Speech" about patients who had agnosias...couldn't understand words. They could still get affect though, and laughed at the President's speech because his affect was comical w/o the sense of the words. Sacks explains that it often takes a long time to identify these patients, because they don't realize they have lost the ability to understand words, and they can understand an amazing amount just through the affect and body language of the speaker. They often have to go to great lengths, eliminating all affect from voice (as with a computer synthesized voice) before the patient realized that they weren't understanding the actual words but inferring everything from the non-linguistic cues. Wow! So interesting, and affect to the extreme!
a video clip!
I've been working on learning DVD Pro, and Final Cut Pro. The footage I've been experimenting with is some Cirque du Soleil recorded off of television several years ago. Here is a short clip of some crazy flexibility and balance!
A picture!
Friday, February 8, 2008
First post for t560
Good Morning and welcome to my world.
It seems...nothing has happened yet!
Tell me something fun that has happened to you lately....
It seems...nothing has happened yet!
Tell me something fun that has happened to you lately....
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