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Creer des Examens et des Devoirs Accessibles Pour les Etudiants Ayant une Deficience Visuelle
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En tant qu'éducateurs, il est impératif de veiller à ce que tous les élèves aient des chances égales de démontrer leurs connaissances et leurs compétences, y compris ceux qui ont des déficiences visuelles telles que la cécité et la basse vision. La création d'examens et de devoirs accessibles est essentielle pour aider ces étudiants à mettre en valeur efficacement leurs capacités. Pour aider ces élèves à naviguer dans les évaluations, vous trouverez ci-dessous quelques conseils à l'intention des enseignants.

Subject:
Education
Educational Technology
Material Type:
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Author:
Light for the World
Date Added:
12/05/2023
Design a Carrying Device for People Using Crutches
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Educational Use
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Students are given a biomedical engineering challenge, which they solve while following the steps of the engineering design process. In a design lab environment, student groups design, create and test prototype devices that help people using crutches carry things, such as books and school supplies. The assistive devices must meet a list of constraints, including a device weight limit and minimum load capacity. Students use various hand and power tools to fabricate the devices. They test the practicality of their designs by loading them with objects and then using the modified crutches in the school hallways and classrooms.

Subject:
Applied Science
Engineering
Health, Medicine and Nursing
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
TeachEngineering
Provider Set:
TeachEngineering
Author:
Kristen Billiar
Terri Camesano
Thomas Oliva
Date Added:
09/18/2014
Disability Law Clinic - Syllabus
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CC BY
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This is the syllabus for the Disability Law Clinic that I'm teaching in Fall 2022 Term. The Disability Law Clinic is a one-semester, six-credit, live-client clinic. It handles a variety of civil and administrative matters for low-income clients with disabilities, including disability rights, special education, access to assitive technology, and Social Security matters.

Subject:
Law
Material Type:
Syllabus
Author:
David Moss
Date Added:
10/05/2022
Disability Rights Law Kahoot!
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CC BY
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This game is designed to test, reinforce, and enhance students' understanding of Disability Rights Law. I've used it in several different ways: as a game that students play in class, with a prize for the winning student or team (playing the game and discussing the correct answers takes about one hour of class time); as a closed-book quiz that students take in class, followed by discussion of the correct answers (again, about one hour of class time); and as an open-book assignment that students complete before class, followed by discussion of the correct answers in class (about 30 minutes of class time).

Subject:
Law
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Assessment
Game
Homework/Assignment
Author:
David Moss
Date Added:
08/28/2022
Documentary Film Review Assignment
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CC BY
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I use this assignment to get my students thinking, writing, and talking about disability, the disability rights movement, and disability policy. I ask students to watch and review several documentary films about people with disabilities and to post their reviews on the clinic's online discussion board.

Subject:
Law
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Author:
David Moss
Date Added:
09/04/2022
Federal Register :: Loans of Library Materials for Blind and Other Print-Disabled Persons
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The Library of Congress is adopting amendments to its regulations regarding loans of library materials for blind and other print-disabled persons, as authorized by Title XIV of the Library of Congress Technical Corrections Act of 2019, to amend terminology, the description of services, and certification requirements, and to memorialize existing practices in the Library of Congress's National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled (NLS).

Subject:
Education
Special Education
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
Library of Congress
Date Added:
08/02/2022
Grades 4-5: Disability, Citizenship, and Civil Rights
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

This unit examines how people seek social and political change to secure their rights. Students explore ideas about disability and learn the many innovative and effective ways that people with disabilities have advocated for their rights across United States history. Lesson 2 focuses on immigration and exclusion; it can stand alone or support this unit; or it could help build a full unit on immigration. In the conclusion of the unit, students evaluate and make a case about how disability advocates made change.
Grades 4-5 - Lesson 1: What is "Disability"?
Grades 4-5 - Lesson 2: Immigration: Who Is In? And Who Is Out?
Grades 4-5 - Lesson 3: History of the Disability Rights Movement
Grades 4-5 - Lesson 4: How Disability Activists Created Change

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum.
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Subject:
History
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades 6-8: Disability, Civic Engagement, and Government
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

This unit works particularly well in a course on civics and government. The intro lesson introduces key information and can be useful to check student knowledge and experiences. Lesson 1 is essential to introduce the unit's study of disability. Lessons 2 & 3 delves into work for disability rights, including transformative legislation. In lesson 4, students apply what they have learned about civic action to research, plan, and carry out their own civic engagement project. (This lesson is also used for Grades 9-12.) Lesson 5 can stand alone or fit within the unit; it adds disability rights as an option for study of historic Supreme Court cases

Grades 6-12 - Intro Lesson: Introduction to Disability History
Grades 6-8 - Lesson 1: What Are Disability Rights?
Grades 6-8 - Lesson 2: Disability Rights Activism
Grades 6-8 - Lesson 3: Disability Rights Legislation
Grades 6-8 - Lesson 4: Inclusive Civics Project - Disability Rights
Grades 6-8 - Lesson 5: Supreme Court Case: Olmstead v. L.C.

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum
,

Subject:
Education
History
Special Education
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades 8-10: Founding of Schools and Asylums
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

An introduction to disability helps establish safe and respectful study of the topic. Lesson 1 examines the context and causes of the growth of schools and asylums in the early 19th century through analysis of images, documents, and slide presentation. Lesson 2 studies federalism and roles of government and adds the voices and perspectives of people with disabilities and journalists, including critics of mass institutions. Students may continue to research institutions in their state. These lessons lay a foundation for discussion of the difficult topic of mass institutionalization, continued in units on the Progressive Era and on Disability Rights.

Grades 6-12 - Intro Lesson: Introduction to Disability History
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 1: Disability and 19th Century Moral Reformers
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 2: Perspectives on Schools and Asylums

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum.
.

Subject:
Education
History
Special Education
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades 8-10: How Civil War Veterans Transformed Disability
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

An introductory lesson calls students to use words about disability with respect. Lesson 1 generates questions about the war, using the Question Formulation Technique. Lesson 2 discusses the scale and historical context of the Union's capacity to care for injured soldiers. Students predict how disability might impact veterans and the nation. Lesson 3 analyzes a story of care for a disabled veteran. Pairs or groups analyze one of seven stories and share key points for discussion. In lesson 4, students analyze ten institutions that served veterans. In the unit assessment, students explain how the war changed ideas about government. In lesson 5, students examine experiences of disabled veterans today through video interviews from the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. Students may research veterans' needs and organize a project to support them.

Grades 6-12 - Intro Lesson: Introduction to Disability History
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 1: A Nation Shocked by War
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 2: Care for Wounded and Disabled Soldiers
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 3: Stories of Men and Women Who Served
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 4: Agents of Care
Grades 8-10 - Lesson 5: Veterans Today

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum

Subject:
Education
History
Special Education
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades 9-12: Disability in the Progressive Era
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

An introduction to disability helps establish safe and respectful study of a difficult topic. Students examine eugenics policy, including forced sterilization and examine how values change. Primary sources include challenges to eugenics from the 1930s as well as 21st century efforts to come to terms with its impacts. The grades 4-5 lesson 2 on immigration policy can provides primary sources and guiding questions that can provide solid support to expand this unit. Unit resources support optional research projects.

Grades 6-12 - Intro Lesson: Introduction to Disability History
Grades 9-12 - Lesson 1: The Dehumanizing Effects of Eugenics

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum.
.

Subject:
Education
History
Special Education
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades 9-12: The Long Struggle for Disability Rights
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Educational Use
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

An introduction helps establish safe and respectful study of disability history. In lesson 1, students the Question Formulation Technique helps develop questions. Then a presentation highlights disabled advocates across American history. In lesson 2, students research the causes, goals and methods, successes and setbacks of the Disability Rights Movement. Students present research with multiple media options: talk with slides, podcast, video, essay, or poster. Lesson 4 guides a genuinely inclusive civic engagement project.

Grades 6-12 - Intro Lesson: Introduction to Disability History
Grades 9-12 - Lesson 1: The Roots of the Disability Rights Movement
Grades 9-12 - Lesson 2: Research and Share Disability Rights History
Grades 9-12 - Inclusive Civics Project - Disability Rights

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum.
.

Subject:
Education
History
History, Law, Politics
Special Education
U.S. History
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
Grades K-3: Disability and Community Leadership
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These lessons are part of the Reform to Equal Rights K-12 Disability History Curriculum from Emerging America, part of the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium.

Lesson 1: students learn about disability and access through primary sources and personal experiences.
Lesson 2: students agree on inclusive decision-making strategies and discuss disability advocates using illustrated stories.
Lesson 3: students examine a case study of disability advocacy and its impact on the community.
All three lessons can be taught in one grade or introduced over multiple grades.

Reform to Equal Rights uses 250+ primary sources. Most are in the public domain. Many others come from public online collections. For the rest, Emerging America secured permission so that teachers can use all these sources in creative ways. https://www.emergingamerica.org/disability-history-curriculum

Subject:
Education
Elementary Education
History
Special Education
Material Type:
Lesson
Lesson Plan
Module
Unit of Study
Author:
Collaborative for Educational Services
Emerging America
Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources
Date Added:
08/05/2024
HUSR 336: Human Sexuality Undergraduate Course, Four Units
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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This brief Human Sexuality curriculum, offered as part of an undergraduate elective in the Human Services department, encompasses four units that collectively provide a comprehensive exploration of sexuality education in the U.S., the intersection of sex and disability, contraception, and variations in sexual behavior including kink and paraphilias. This curriculum provides varied, current, and accessible information about these topics using resources that students can continue to access for free after the end of the semester.

Unit 1: Introduction to Human Sexuality & Sexual Education in the U.S. introduces students to the history of sex education in the United States, facilitating reflection on personal experiences in contrast with broader research and policies.
Unit 2: Sex and Disability dives into the significance of inclusive sex education for individuals with physical, intellectual, and developmental disabilities. It provides in-depth resources and firsthand accounts, extending beyond typical textbook content.
Unit 3: Contraception focuses on contemporary contraceptive methods through a hands-on workshop and an on-campus scavenger hunt, emphasizing gender-neutral and inclusive resources.
Unit 4: Variations in Sexual Behavior: Kink and Paraphilias explores atypical sexual behaviors including paraphilias, kink, and BDSM using diverse media to present current and accessible content.

Each unit includes detailed lesson plans adaptable to synchronous and asynchronous formats, learning objectives, assigned materials, interactive components, and selected student feedback.

Subject:
Applied Science
Gender and Sexuality Studies
Health, Medicine and Nursing
Social Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lesson Plan
Unit of Study
Provider:
University of Northern Colorado
Author:
Colorado School Of Public Health At The University Of Northern Colorado
Emily Darrell
Rose Grace Grose
Date Added:
07/18/2024
Heritages of Change: Curatorial Activism and First-Year Writing [Revised Edition]
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This textbook, Heritages of Change: Curatorial Activism and First-Year Writing, includes principles of writing and information literacy through the lenses of curatorial activism, cultural heritage, and curation/exhibition. Heritage topics that students are introduced to include (but are not limited to): anti-racism, #MeToo, indigenous peoples, women/gender/LGBTQIA+, climate change, etc. They gain a broader understanding of cultural heritage and heritages of change, particularly disability heritage, in general in order to apply the concepts through their writing. This textbook presents these topics, but more specifically how to communicate about and research them.

In first-year writing courses, it can often feel that we practice writing and research in a vacuum. Writing is about communication, and, if we do not feel that we have an audience, then it can seem like our writing has no purpose (even though practice of any kind will help us develop these skills). Heritages of Change: Curatorial Activism and First-Year Writing is a method for students to think about the social changes that were prevalent during the COVID years and remain important in their wake. Heritages of Change is a lens for thinking and writing about these ideas. Through curation and exhibition as an act of activism, students focus on a specific audience with whom they can communicate authentically about this dynamic world.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Material Type:
Textbook
Provider:
Remixing Open Textbooks through an Equity Lens (ROTEL) Project
Author:
Kisha G. Tracy
Date Added:
01/30/2024
How to manage art production workshops
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Guidelines about how to manage art production workshops for adult learners with disability: a support to the educators for the management of general art production workshops addressed to groups of adult people and adult people with disabilities in terms of a methodological framework.

Subject:
Arts and Humanities
Graphic Arts
Material Type:
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Date Added:
10/19/2022
Increasing Accessibility in Online Learning Environments
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CC BY
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This module is for Education Science majors specializing in Educational Technology, and those specifically interested in educational technology and instructional design. This module seeks to inform students about why accessibility is an essential consideration when developing online learning materials and how it manifests in online learning environments as well as provide a learning activity. In this learning activity, students will analyze their own online courses they are enrolled in and assess accessibility in their content.

Subject:
Educational Technology
Material Type:
Module
Author:
Madeline Browy
Date Added:
10/27/2024
Initial Client Interview Transcript
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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I use this (fictional) transcript of an initial client interview to get students thinking and talking about the component parts of an initial client interview and how an initial client interview might best be structured. I ask students to read the transcript before class and make an outline of what the interviewer is doing at different points in the interview. In class, I recruit students to read multiple parts of the transcript out loud, with breaks in the action to discuss what the interviewer is doing and how it might be done differently. The interview focuses on disability-based housing discrimination but no prior knowledge of disability or Disability Rights Law is needed for students to understand what's going on.

Subject:
Law
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Reading
Author:
David Moss
Date Added:
04/23/2022