This short course aims to increase educators' awareness of matters relating to …
This short course aims to increase educators' awareness of matters relating to accessibility and how they can remove these barriers to increase access for all to education.
Following a series of lessons regarding characteristics of physical disabilities and accessibility, …
Following a series of lessons regarding characteristics of physical disabilities and accessibility, students will have opportunities to present their research on issues pertaining to accessibility in their communities. They can work on it as a group or individually.
On April 18, 2023, #GoOpen held a public webinar titled, "Integrating OER into …
On April 18, 2023, #GoOpen held a public webinar titled, "Integrating OER into Instructional Initiatives." The session featured Rebecca Henderson, Curriculum Services Supervisor, Westmoreland Intermediate Unit, PA; Tracy Rains, Virtual Learning Specialist, Appalachia Intermediate Unit 8, PA; and, Kelly Hammond, OER and Open Pedagogy Adjunct, CUNY School of Professional Studies; and facilitator, Amee Evans Godwin of ISKME and the #GoOpen National Network.
In this module, teaching credential candidates in elementary, secondary, and special education …
In this module, teaching credential candidates in elementary, secondary, and special education will learn about the assets and inequities that a focus on intersectionality can illuminate, and how this learning will affect their future work in classrooms.
This course entitled “Introduction to Assitive Technology Typesand Categories" was prepared and …
This course entitled “Introduction to Assitive Technology Typesand Categories" was prepared and designed by Mada Center, Qatar. It is part of the program : "Introduction to ICT Accessibility and Inclusive Design".
The purpose of this video lesson is to expand the student's knowledge …
The purpose of this video lesson is to expand the student's knowledge about the use and non-use of public health care facilities in low-income societies. Students will learn that a range of different factors, such as availability, accessibility, cost and quality of care play important roles when rural citizens take decisions about health care seeking. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Burkina Faso, West Africa, this lesson explains why public health care facilities in the global south sometimes are underutilized.
Introduction Most of us can hardly conceive of life without the internet. …
Introduction Most of us can hardly conceive of life without the internet. Some have argued that no other single invention has been more revolutionary since Gutenberg's printing press in the 1400s. The world can be “at your fingertips” at the click of a mouse—if you can use a mouse... and see the screen... and hear the audio.
I use this Jeopardy!-style game to test, reinforce, and enhance students' understanding …
I use this Jeopardy!-style game to test, reinforce, and enhance students' understanding of Special Education Law. Playing the game and discussing the answers takes about one hour. I use a free online multiplayer buzzer system that requires students to respond to questions by typing their answers into a text entry field (www.cosmobuzz.net). I give students plenty of time to answer each question and award points for all correct answers. At the end of the game, I award a prize to the winning student (e.g. a Starbucks gift card). I haven't uploaded the answer key here because I don't want students to see the correct answers online; feel free to email me at david.moss@wayne.edu for a copy of the answer key.
In Spring 2023, Open Oregon Educational Resources partnered with ORAHEAD and WebAIM …
In Spring 2023, Open Oregon Educational Resources partnered with ORAHEAD and WebAIM to offer a Strategic Digital Accessibility Training program to institutions in Oregon. The purpose of this program was to provide critical support for advancing digital accessibility action planning in Oregon. This document is the output of Linn-Benton Community College's participation. It is our hope that this proposal helps advance LBCC’s mission and values, especially Inclusiveness, Learning, and Excellence.
Ensuring digital accessibility is critical to advancing equity-minded education at Lane Community …
Ensuring digital accessibility is critical to advancing equity-minded education at Lane Community College. Through this project, with the assistance of Open Oregon and WebAIM, we were able to identify and work towards actionable goals to improve digital accessibility on our campus.
Leadership in Inclusive Technology Systems Share: Line drawing of a rocket ship …
Leadership in Inclusive Technology Systems Share: Line drawing of a rocket ship Effective technology leadership promotes the development of a balanced and inclusive technology infrastructure that examines assistive technology (AT), educational technology (EdTech), and information technology (IT) as part of a technology ecosystem.
The Center for Inclusive Technology in Education Systems (CITES) has utilized a design-thinking process, in partnership with local districts, to refine a set of leadership practices that enhance the development of a balanced and inclusive technology infrastructure.
CITES leadership practices include:
Create vision & goals Develop a strategic plan Measure progress Develop learning outcomes Plan infrastructure
This guide is designed to support your own professional learning around learner …
This guide is designed to support your own professional learning around learner variability as well as ideas and resources for sharing with other educators.
Did you know that there is no such thing as an average learner? In fact, each and every learner is different across a whole child spectrum—from the content they know, cognitive abilities, social and emotional factors, and background. Our experiences and our environment shape the way we think and feel about learning and our readiness to process new information. Understanding the research behind learner variability helps us disrupt the inequities of a one-size-fits-all education.
What is learner variability? It is a recognition that each and every student has a unique set of strengths and challenges that impact the way we learn. Learning science research supports the concept of learner variability and provides pathways and strategies for student success in school and beyond. For example, a factor of learning such as working memory, critical to learning new information, can be affected by emotions or sleep. Additionally, it helps us understand how factors can be affected by context. How students learn in person versus virtually or from one subject to the next can be very different. Students may respond positively to different strategies in different situations or work better with different people in different classes. It also helps us understand important social and emotional connections like how a Sense of Belonging can affect students’ readiness and Motivation to engage in learning.
Did you know that learning styles is a myth? Learning styles is a popular idea that many people learned in school. It says that we are either auditory, visual, or kinesthetic learners. But, that is not what research tells us. Research says we learn best when all three options are present and that which modality we rely on may change according to the task. For instance, the way you remember a phone number may be different from the way you learn about a historical event or a math formula. Furthermore, people who think of themselves as only learning one way, (e.g., I am a visual) learner, can close themselves off from other learning experiences.
One in five students in the U.S. are estimated to have learning …
One in five students in the U.S. are estimated to have learning and attention issues. Specific learning disabilities can include dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia, while attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) centers on an individual's challenge with focus. Learning and attention issues often co-occur. These brain-based differences are not the result of low intelligence, poor vision, or hearing. Although young people will not ‘grow out’ of their learning or attention challenge, the appropriate, evidence-based programs and strategies can support a learner to become successful in school, work, and life.
It is particularly important that these interventions occur early on (ideally prior to third grade) to provide students the support they need at critical periods of learning and development. While learning and attention challenges affect all learners from every income level and across all races, genders, and ethnicities, students who are Indigenous, Black, Brown, living in poverty, or learning English are more often over- or under-identified with specific learning disability diagnoses.
This learning guide offers educators context, vocabulary, discussion questions, learning activities, printable games and templates, and other resources to support conversations about disability, accessibility, social justice, and community building. We Move Together is a bold and colourful exploration of all the ways that people navigate through the spaces around them and a celebration of the relationships we build along the way. We Move Together follows a mixed-ability group of kids as they creatively negotiate everyday barriers and find joy and connection in disability culture and community.
Lecture slides developed to accompany ARTID 569A: Inclusive Environments, an Interior Design …
Lecture slides developed to accompany ARTID 569A: Inclusive Environments, an Interior Design course offered at Iowa State University. These slides cover the history of disability rights in the United States, design standards, and more. Questions are included within the slides for assessment.
In this course, we explore how new mobility systems can be leveraged …
In this course, we explore how new mobility systems can be leveraged to promote equity, improve health outcomes, and increase accessibility. Lectures by transportation professors from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the United States are supplemented with interviews with preeminent entrepreneurs, city planners, community development experts, and mobility justice advocates. Topics covered include land use and urban form; new mobility business models, pricing, policy, technology, and data; the importance of designing new mobility systems for equity, health, and the environment; and racial justice within the transportation field. This course is part of the Open Learning Library, which is free to use. You have the option to sign up and enroll in the course if you want to track your progress, or you can view and use all the materials without enrolling.
Students with disabilities at Umpqua Community College deserve access to all campus …
Students with disabilities at Umpqua Community College deserve access to all campus opportunities to engage, to learn, and to be known. Because we know that advancing digital accessibility is a collective project with many stakeholders, this local action plan proposes short term and long term goals to help campus stakeholders work together and improve digital accessibility over time.
This Task Force acknowledges the level of support already received from the campus administration and faculty for accessibility efforts within asynchronous and synchronous online courses. It is our hope to use this information as a platform to increase accessibility within the physical classroom as well as digitally.
This module is designed for pre-service teachers who are learning about low-incidence …
This module is designed for pre-service teachers who are learning about low-incidence disabilities. The following are included: Multicultural and Bilingual Aspects of Special EducationLow-Incidence, Multiple, and Severe DisabilitiesAutism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Learners with Emotional or Behavioral DisordersLearners who are Deaf or Hard of HearingLearners with Blindness or Low VisionLearners with Physical Disabilities and Other Health ImpairmentsGifted
This guide will identify E-accessibility standards in the specified domains of: 1. …
This guide will identify E-accessibility standards in the specified domains of: 1. Websites 2. Mobile applications 3. Electronic documents 4. Media (video and audio) 5. Electronic kiosks and automated teller machines (ATMs) 6. Text and video relay services for the deaf
No restrictions on your remixing, redistributing, or making derivative works. Give credit to the author, as required.
Your remixing, redistributing, or making derivatives works comes with some restrictions, including how it is shared.
Your redistributing comes with some restrictions. Do not remix or make derivative works.
Most restrictive license type. Prohibits most uses, sharing, and any changes.
Copyrighted materials, available under Fair Use and the TEACH Act for US-based educators, or other custom arrangements. Go to the resource provider to see their individual restrictions.