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danny hagfeldt

Technology Tuesdays: Popcorn and an iPad - Billings - March 20, 2012 - 0 views

  • You can register online here! or download the full flyer here!What:Join us for March’s Technology Tuesday as we explore the world of iPad apps for educators. Presenter Trina Halama will share apps for the iPad that are educational tools that can be used in the classroom. There are a variety of useful apps to make the classroom livelier and more engaging for both the students and teacher. Among the apps being shared are apps for time management, social networking, discussion forums and boards, books, art and graphics, and much more. Some of the particular apps to be shared are: Kindle, How Stuff Works, Flashcardlet, free books, Red Stamp, Toontastic, Math Quizzer, Quick Graph, and more. This will be an opportunity to receive and share resources. Bring your iPad or use one of ours!Trina Halama is a 2007 graduate of MSUB with an emphasis on elementary education and a minor in music. Currently, she teaches third grade at Fromberg Elementary School. She is on Fromberg’s Technology Board, the Promethean Consortium Board, is pursing certification to teach Promethean and SMART Board technologies, and has a vast knowledge of technology in general. Trina is also a Library Information and Technology Literacy trainer for the Montana Regional Education Service Area III.When:March 20, 20125:00 pm - 7:00 pmWhere:MSUB College of Ed. BldgRoom 122Billings, MTContact:John KeenerPhone: (406) 657-1743Email: john.keener@msubillings.eduorDebra MillerPhone: (406) 657-2072Email: dmiller@msubillings.eduIf you have a particular question or suggestion you can contact Trina at thalama@fromberg.k12.mt.us.
Sierra Boehm

Innovative iPad App Implementation - Webinar - Sept. 24, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this webinar

    What:
    Given that those with communication and behavioral impairments have such varying needs and abilities, how should we be personalizing assistive technology for each learner? With the introduction of the iPad and the proliferation of mobile technology, it is finally possible to customize your assistive technology to the life experience of each individual, thereby increasing their interaction, independence and self-determination. Come experience real life examples of how personalization and customization lead to improved outcomes in a variety of settings. Walk away with the best practices for applying these techniques in the home, community, school and vocational settings using the AutisMate app.

    When:
    Tuesday, September 23, 2013
    12:00 pm - 1:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    Free of charge
Meliah Bell

Medical Home Update - WEBINARS - Multiple Dates - 0 views

  •  
    Webinar: From Research to Real Life-Increasing Visibility and Use of Family-to-Family Centers December 3, 2012-1pm (Mountain)
    Call-in: 866/214-9397, Pin: 5058724774
    Webinar Link: https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/familyvoices/join?id=24R5TP&role=attend
    The Family Voices National Center for Family and Professional Partnerships is hosting this webinar presented by Suzanne M. Bronheim, PhD of Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development. Suzanne will share findings from a 2010 research partnership with three Family-to-Family Health Information Centers (F2F HICs) to better understand how Hispanic/Latino families' and African American families' utilization of F2F HICs might be increased. This research project is based on a social marketing theory that suggests that people try new things if that "innovation" fits with their values and experience, seems to have an advantage over other approaches, is easy to use, can be tried and dropped if they don't like it and if others they know and trust are also aware of it and have used it. The project has used this framework to study how Hispanic/Latino and African American families prefer to receive information and how they view the F2F HICs as a resource. In addition, this project has studied similar issues for the social networks of families to learn how they view and access F2F HICs. Suzanne will be joined by staff of the F2F HICs that partnered in this project to share lessons learned and suggestions of how other F2F HICs can use this framework.  
Roger Holt

2009 Summer Institute on Assistive Technology - 0 views

  • 2009 Summer Institute on Assistive Technology   Register today for the 2009 Online Summer Institute on Assistive & Instructional Tecnology. The Institute will take place July 20-31, 2009. This year's topics are: Use of Social Media Tools and Accessible Instructional Materials: NIMAS and Beyond. Whether you participate in the Institute for continuing education credit or just to increase your knowledge, our faculty of assistive technology experts will share successful strategies and useful resources.  Join colleagues throughout the country from the comfort of your office or home.
Roger Holt

Family Caregivers Need Access & Training on Assistive Technologies - Disability.gov - 0 views

  • As the demographics shift to reflect an aging population, innovation abounds in the area of developing new assistive technologies to make life tasks easier for an individual with disabilities or for a family caregiver. How can you find out about existing or new technologies? One answer is finding information on the Internet, and a recent online survey of caregivers provides some insight into this question.
Roger Holt

Assistive Technology Advocacy - 0 views

  • A key question, often left unstated during assistive technology consideration, is: Who can benefit from assistive technology? Federal law is silent on this issue assuming that the local IEP team is in the best position to decide if a student’s needs can be met through technology interventions or other accommodations.
Terry Booth

M-Enabling Summit Conference and Showcase - D.C. - Dec. 5-6, 2011 - 0 views

  • Click here to register for this event What: The M-Enabling Summit, Global Summit and Showcase for Mobile Applications and Services for Seniors and Persons with Disabilities, is the first global program solely dedicated to participants in the emerging ecosystem for mobile accessible and assistive technologies, applications and services. Unlike any other conference or exposition, the M-Enabling Summit brings together all facets of the industry. Key stakeholders from across the globe that develop, market, create policy, and deploy the initiatives that are setting new frontiers for Mobile Accessible and Assistive Solutions will be in attendance. Participants at M-Enabling Summit will be able to: Network and exchange ideas with peers and experts from industry, service providers, and organizations of seniors and persons with disabilities Learn about the latest developments, innovations, market drivers and emerging opportunities Share perspectives with global policy makers and regulators See the latest products, services and applications in a showcase featuring companies and organizations driving innovation with accessible and assistive mobile technologies solutions Gain new insights from case studies by service providers, and public and private sector organizations experienced in marketing and services for seniors and persons with disabilities Who Should Attend: Mobile service providers Accessibility experts Organizations of seniors and persons with disabilities Application developers Telecom regulators Emergency response officials IT professionals Corporations using mobile communications with their customers Federal agencies and local government Academia and research centers When: December 5-6, 2011 Where: The Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center Washington, D.C.
Terry Booth

Cognitive Support Technologies: A New Comprehensive Resource - Webinar - March 15, 2011 - 0 views

  •  
    Click here to register for this event What:
    This webinar provides resources for keeping up to date with new cognitive support technologies and provides examples of products and vendors. Cognitive Support Technologies are a class of AT designed to help with memory, attention, concentration, perception, executive functioning and so on. Depending on individual need and preference, individuals with dementia, or traumatic and acquired brain injury or who were born with intellectual disability, can potentially benefit from: Personal Assistance Strategies Everyday Technologies (e.g. Apple iPhone) Specialized Technologies (e.g. Jitterbug phone) Which one, or combination, is most appropriate for an individual requires an early and comprehensive assessment.The presentation will outline the process for selecting, integrating and utilizing assistive technology for persons with cognitive disability. Each stage of the process will be examined in depth, as will the parameters requiring consideration at each stage.  When:
    March 15, 2012
    1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Mountain Time
Kiona Pearson

Department of Education Issues Guidance on Rights of Students with Disabilities When Educational Institutions Use Technology - 0 views

  • What: Today, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) issued guidance through Dear Colleague Letters to elementary and secondary schools and institutions of higher education along with a Frequently Asked Questions document on the legal obligation to provide students with disabilities an equal opportunity to enjoy the benefits of technology. This guidance is a critical step in the Department’s ongoing efforts to ensure that students with disabilities receive equal access to the educational benefits and services provided by their schools, colleges and universities. All students, including those with disabilities, must have the tools needed to obtain a world-class education that prepares them for success in college and careers. Today’s guidance provides information to schools about their responsibilities under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The guidance supplements a June 2010 letter issued jointly by OCR and the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. The June letter explains that technological devices must be accessible to students with disabilities, including students who are blind or have low vision, unless the benefits of the technology are provided equally through other means. Today’s guidance highlights what educational institutions need to know and take into consideration in order to ensure that students with disabilities enjoy equal access when information and resources are provided through technology. “Technology can be a critical investment in enhancing educational opportunities for all students,” said Russlynn Ali, assistant secretary for civil rights. “The Department is firmly committed to ensuring that schools provide students with disabilities equal access to the benefits of technological advances.” Today’s guidance is part of a larger effort by the Department and Obama administration to better serve the needs of people with disabilities. Last month, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan joined Kareem Dale, associate director for the White House Office of Public Engagement and special assistant to the President for disability policy, for a conference call with stakeholders to talk about some of the Department’s efforts. During the call, Duncan discussed the Department’s commitment to maintaining accountability in No Child Left Behind for all subgroups, including students with disabilities, and highlighted the Department’s proposal to increase funding for students with disabilities in the fiscal year 2012 budget. Ali will also join Dale for a stakeholder conference call where she will discuss today’s guidance and address the Department’s work to ensure that all schools are fulfilling their responsibilities under the federal disability laws that OCR enforces.
Roger Holt

FCTD - Sep 2009 - Assistive Technology - 0 views

  • “Nobody Is Too ‘Anything’ to Read, Write or Communicate” The late news broadcaster Walter Cronkite catalogued the ills of the world every night for television viewers. But through the cataract of daily despair he always glimpsed a reason to hope, to be joyful about the possibilities of the moment and beyond. For the tens of millions of viewers who watched his coverage of the first lunar landing 40 years ago that enthusiasm reached out from their TV sets, when, at the moment of human touchdown on the surface of the moon, Cronkite shed his cloak of objectivity and exuberantly exclaimed, “Oh, boy!”
  • Despite the many daily challenges that confront them in their sphere, members of school district assistive technology teams nationwide share Cronkite’s enthusiasm for the vast potential of technology to change the lives of individuals with disabilities. Sure, the struggles AT team members face are daunting: lack of time and money; too many pre-service and in-service teachers without sufficient AT training; funding-strapped districts that are sometimes reluctant to approve teams’ AT recommendations for individual students; the reluctance of some districts to accept AT’s viability, and a continuing belief in a few education quarters that some children with disabilities may never learn to read and write. Fortunately, among district AT team members – speech-language pathologists (SLP’s), occupational therapists (OT’s) and others – the technology flame burns brighter than ever. Their enthusiasm still bubbles. Their thirst for information about the latest technology developments that may aid their district’s children is unquenched. And their conviction that no child is too disabled to read or write remains not only ironclad but often translates into a hard-won happy reality for the children with whom they work.
Terry Booth

Technology Tuesdays: Popcorn and an iPad 2 - Billings - May 1, 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    You can register online here or download the full flyer here!

    What:
    Join us for March's Technology Tuesday as we explore the world of iPad apps for educators. Presenter Trina Halama will share apps for the iPad that are educational tools that can be used in the classroom. There are a variety of useful apps to make the classroom livelier and more engaging for both the students and teacher. Among the apps being shared are apps for time management, social networking, discussion forums and boards, books, art and graphics, and much more. Some of the particular apps to be shared are: Kindle, How Stuff Works, Flashcardlet, free books, Red Stamp, Toontastic, Math Quizzer, Quick Graph, and more. This will be an opportunity to receive and share resources.

    Bring your iPad or use one of ours!


    When:
    Tuesday, May 1, 2012
    5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

    Where:
    MSUB College of Ed. Bldg
    Room 122
    Billings, MT

    Contact:
    John Keener
    Phone: (406) 657-1743
    Email: john.keener@msubillings.edu

    Debra Miller
    Phone: (406) 657-2072
    Email: dmiller@msubillings.edu

    If you have a particular question or suggestion you can contact Trina at thalama@fromberg.k12.mt.us.
Roger Holt

Keene State College - Office of Disability Services Assistive Technology web resource! - 0 views

  • Assistive technology (AT) is any tool that helps students with disabilities do things more quickly, easily or independently. It can be elaborate and expensive or simple and low-cost. This site is dedicated to researching and organizing free or low cost assistive technologies that are applicable to college students.
Roger Holt

Assistive Technology: Resource Roundup | Edutopia - 0 views

  • An educator's and parent's guide to websites, blogs, articles, and videos that provide information and tools related to understanding, selecting, and assessing assistive technology and accessible instructional materials.
Sierra Boehm

How Caregivers Can Benefit from Assistive Technology - Webinar - Nov. 18, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event

    What:
    No registration required.

    When:
    Monday, November 18, 2013
    12:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    No cost
Roger Holt

Assistive Technology - Wrightslaw - 0 views

  • Many children with disabilities have difficulties with reading, writing, and math. Some children have problems with vision, hearing, listening and/or communicating. Others have physical, mobility, and motor problems. Assistive technology helps children use their strengths to compensate or "work around" weaknesses caused by the disability. Assistive technology includes "devices" and "services."
Roger Holt

ATWiki Home - assistive technology - 0 views

  • an encyclopedia on assistive technology that anyone can edit.Articles contributed to this site will be viewable from the assistivetech.net website.
Terry Booth

Assistive Technology at Work - Webinar - Feb. 23, 2010 - 0 views

  •  
    "Join us for the third session in our 2009/2010 Youth Track Web Conference series! During this web conference, you will learn about assistive technology solutions to increase independence at work; low-tech options for organizing, memory and communication support; and much more! Youth Track sessions are geared toward young adults (13-30) with developmental disabilities. We encourage teachers to allow their students to participate in these sessions as a class activity. Family members, educators, service providers, and other interested individuals are always welcome to attend the Youth Track web conferences."
Roger Holt

Module 5: Assistive Technology Interventions - Early Childhood Community - 0 views

  •  
    The Center to Mobilize Early Childhood Knowledge has published a new online module on the purpose, use and potential benefits of assistive technology interventions when working with young children. CONNECT Modules are free online modules that include high quality videos, handouts and activities based on real life, practice-focused dilemmas.
Terry Booth

Accessibility Camp - Missoula - Mar. 9, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Click here to register for this camp
    What:
    Accessibility Camp Missoula is dedicated to the simple premise that "digital inclusion" is fundamental in the digital age. Focused on users with different disabilities and abilities, Accessibility Camp Missoula 2013 sessions will cover digital accessibility topics from the website accessibility, assistive technologies in schools and universities, aging and technology to reading and publishing software accessibility, mobile apps, and everything in between. Regardless of your level of knowledge or the age of people served, come and participate. It will be a great opportunity for members of the usability, accessibility, other IT, education and disability communities to interact and learn from each other. Our goal is to raise awareness about accessibility related topics and issues in Montana. Accessibility Camp Missoula is the first step towards designing the accessible future. When:
    Saturday, March 9th, 2013
    9:00 am to 4:00 pm (Lunch: 12:30 - 1:30 pm) Where:
    MOLLI: Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
    University of Montana Campus
    Missoula, MT Cost:
    $25.00 (covers lunch) Contact:
    accessibilitycampmissoula@gmail.com or http://accessibilitycampmissoula.org/contact
Sierra Boehm

PAK Meeting: Assitive Technology - Butte - May 4, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Download the flyer for this event What:
    Anyone wanting to know more about Assistive Technology rights and processes; including parents, schools, and support staff are invited to attend the upcoming PAK meeting featuring presenter Theresa Baldry.

    When:
    Saturday, May 4, 2013
    10:00 am - 12:00 pm  Mountain

    Where:
    Business Development Center, Conference Room
    305 West Mercury Street
    Butte, MT 59701

    For more information contact:
    Diana Tavary
    1-406-439-5570
    dtavary@pluk.org
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