Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ PLUK eNews
Roger Holt

The Future of Universal Design | Disability.Blog - 0 views

  • Universal design (UD) is an idea that developed in the mid-1990s as advocates of making buildings and products accessible to people with disabilities realized that these features often had benefits for a broader population. Examples include curb ramps, automated doors, closed captioning in television sets and accessibility features for computer operating systems.
Roger Holt

New Recommendations Guide Treatment For Those On The Spectrum - Disability Scoop - 0 views

  • For the first time in 15 years, a major psychiatric organization is updating its practice guidelines for treating kids and adolescents with autism. A series of seven recommendations from the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry outline the responsibilities clinicians have in diagnosing and treating those on the spectrum. The guidance published this month in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is an update to recommendations first presented by the group in 1999. It offers clinicians a roadmap for the best assessment and treatment practices for autism, though doctors must also take into account each patient’s unique circumstances in developing a plan, the organization said.
Roger Holt

Rolling Dance Chair a step toward freedom of movement for people with disabilities | Li... - 0 views

  • Morris is a dance professor at the University of South Florida, and more recently, an inventor. She was introducing kids with spina bifida and cerebral palsy to a chair she dreamed up. On this weekend in their class, the chair would let them dance. Not pretend to dance, not be pulled by a dancer, but actually dance.
Roger Holt

Tongue piercing lets paralysed drive wheelchairs - Story - World - 3 News - 0 views

  • An experimental device is letting paralysed people drive wheelchairs simply by flicking their tongue in the right direction. Key to this wireless system: Users get their tongue pierced with a magnetic stud that resembles jewellery and acts like a joystick, in hopes of offering them more mobility and independence. Researchers reported Wednesday that 11 people paralysed from the neck down rapidly learned to use the tongue device to pilot their wheelchairs through an obstacle course full of twists and turns, and to operate a computer, too.
Roger Holt

SENG Parent Groups - Montana AGATE - 0 views

  • In November 2012, AGATE trained new facilitators of "SENG-model parent groups".  We now have trained facilitators in Great Falls, Hamilton, Columbia Falls, and Bozeman.   If you'll like to join or request a SENG-model parent group in your area, contact one of the trained facilitators.  
  • SENG (Supporting Emotional Needs of the Gifted) emphasizes the importance of parent support groups.
Roger Holt

New diagnostic category will hold subset of autism cases - SFARI.org - Simons Foundatio... - 0 views

  • Most of the children who would lose their autism diagnosis under the diagnostic criteria released last year will fall under the new category of social (pragmatic) communication disorder (SCD), reports a large study of Korean children. The study was published last week in the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry1.
Roger Holt

10 Tips for Special Education Advocates by Pat Howey, Advocate - 0 views

  • 10 Tips for Special Education Advocates
  • Remember, your goal is to assist parents in achieving an appropriate education for their child.
  • 1. Good advocates facilitate the IEP process.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • 2. Good advocates know the child and understand the disability.
  • 3. Good advocates try to reduce existing barriers between the parent and the school.
  • 4. Good advocates are willing to admit mistakes and to apologize.
  • 5. Good advocates hone their listening skills to a fine edge.
  • 6. Good advocates learn the art of negotiation.
  • 7. Good advocates understand special and general education law and the interrelationship between these and other laws.
  • 8. Good advocates know that understanding the law is different from quoting the law.
  • 9. Good advocates understand the importance of ethical behavior in their practice.
  • 10. Good advocates treat others the way they would like to be treated.
Roger Holt

The Encyclopedia of Sports and Recreation for People with Visual Impairments (Critical ... - 0 views

  • Not long ago, most blind and visually impaired people grew up without ever playing sports; they sat on the sidelines, and kept score during gym-protected rather than included. In the 1980s, few people had ever heard of the Paralympic Games or accessible recreation. Today, promising blind athletes can receive residency at the US Olympic Training Center; runners compete for prize money and national championships, and most ski resorts offer adaptive programs throughout the year where blind people can ski, cycle, and kayak-often for free. The Paralympic movement, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and ever-increasing expectation for inclusion among the disabled have inspired an explosion of accessible sports, fitness, and recreation programs that accommodate the blind. The Encyclopedia of Sports & Recreation for People with Visual Impairments is the first consumer- focused, action-oriented guide to this new world of accessible activity, profiling the people, programs, and products that are helping move blind and visually impaired people from the sidelines into the game. This groundbreaking guide profiles every accessible blind sport and recreation activity with entries that outline how athletes (both novice and elite) got involved in the sport and how participation has shaped their life. The book also profiles major blind sports organizations and includes chapter and resource listings on camps and accessible recreation providers. Through this book, blind people will be inspired to embrace sports as the rest of society does-as a vital component of personal expression and human interaction that opens paths to adventure, confidence, and lifelong health and fitness
Roger Holt

Baker Summer Camp Program | Family Services/Grants | Autism Speaks - 0 views

  • New! February 3, 2014 - The 2014 Autism Speaks Baker Summer Camp Grant application is now open! The Autism Speaks Baker Summer Camp Program selects eligible camps in the United States to identify qualified campers and offer scholarship funds for financially disadvantaged children with Autism Spectrum Disorder to attend a summer camp. Note: Individuals may not apply for the program. If you are an individual interested in obtaining a scholarship for your child, please encourage your local camp to apply for a scholarship fund.
Roger Holt

Children's Books Lauded For Highlighting Disabilities - Disability Scoop - 0 views

  • Alongside the famed Caldecott and Newbery awards for children’s literature, three books are being honored for focusing on the disability experience.
Roger Holt

Hopeful Parents: The little boy who died of a toothache: Why dental care is so importan... - 0 views

  • If you’re like me, your child has so many medical appointments it may be hard to keep up with routine or preventive care.  But family caregivers need to know how essential dental care is for their children.  Parents may think, oh it’s just teeth, and have so many more urgent things to do.  But oral health is just as important as other physical health.
Roger Holt

Feds To Fund Tracking Devices For Kids With Autism - Disability Scoop - 0 views

  • The Justice Department will make funding available immediately to provide free electronic tracking devices for kids with autism who are at risk of wandering. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Wednesday that his department has existing grant money that can be used for the technology.
Roger Holt

Meditation transforms roughest San Francisco schools - SFGate - 0 views

  • At first glance, Quiet Time - a stress reduction strategy used in several San Francisco middle and high schools, as well as in scattered schools around the Bay Area - looks like something out of the om-chanting 1960s. Twice daily, a gong sounds in the classroom and rowdy adolescents, who normally can't sit still for 10 seconds, shut their eyes and try to clear their minds. I've spent lots of time in urban schools and have never seen anything like it.
Roger Holt

ATN/AIR-P Guide to Exploring Feeding Behavior in Autism | Science/Find Resources & Prog... - 0 views

  • Some researchers estimate that over half of children with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have some sort of issue with food. These feeding issues can be of significant concern to parents because they might impact their child’s health and wellbeing.  The Autism Speaks Autism Treatment Network (ATN) created Exploring Feeding Behavior in Autism: A Guide for Parents to help parents and professionals better understand the “nuts and bolts” of feeding issues.
Roger Holt

Software lets UM students hear text - Montana Kaimin: News - 0 views

  • A new software at the University of Montana now allows students and employees to highlight text with their cursors and have it read out loud. Read&Write Gold became available for students, faculty and staff Jan. 8th.
Roger Holt

New diagnostic criteria may abate autism prevalence - SFARI.org - Simons Foundation Aut... - 0 views

  • About one in five children who appeared to have autism in 2006 and 2008 would lose that classification with the diagnostic criteria for autism released last year, according to a study published yesterday in JAMA Psychiatry1.
Roger Holt

In Push For Community Living, States Offered Incentives - Disability Scoop - 0 views

  • In New Hampshire, Medicaid pays for in-home care for nearly all of its residents with developmental disabilities. For frail elders, the opposite is true. Most wind up in nursing homes. To remedy this imbalance, New Hampshire is taking advantage of Affordable Care Act funding for a program aimed at removing existing barriers to providing long-term care in people’s homes and communities. Known as the Balancing Incentive Payments Program, it is one of several ACA provisions designed to keep as many people as possible out of costly institutions. Arkansas, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio and Texas are also participating in the $3 billion incentive program.
Sierra Boehm

Implementing the Common Core for the Uncommon Learner - Webinar - June 5, 2014 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event

    What:
    This webinar will examine strategies and resources that are can be used to support students with learning disabilities achieve proficiency with the Common Core State Standards in English/Language Arts and Mathematics. We will examine a range of free and for fee digital resources, as well as low tech/no tech supports that provide access to a standards based curriculum for students who struggle with traditional pencil and paper tasks. This session will dig deep into the language of the indicators to examine the expectations for students and how to utilize accessible instructional materials that meet student needs.

    When:
    Thursday, June 5, 2014
    1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    $49.00
Sierra Boehm

Technology for Accessing Electronic Information for People who are Blind or Visually Im... - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event

    What:
    Large quantities of information are becoming available only in an electronic format. Current technology is now providing a wide variety of tools that can be used to access electronic information tactilely, visually and auditorily. Understanding these tools and how they can assist people who are blind or visually impaired can be confusing to some service providers and consumers. This webinar will provide participants with information about the advantages and disadvantages of these tools for accomplishing specific tasks.

    When:
    Tuesday, April 29, 2014
    1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    $49.00
Sierra Boehm

AT Professional Development, It's not just workshops any more - Webinar - Apr. 2, 2014 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event

    What:
    Time for face to face training in schools setting is rapidly dwindling. But there are many alternative opportunities for online professional development. They include webinars; online instructional modules, web sites offering both AT device and AT service tips and tutorials, and a host of videos about AT and the people who use it from video hosting sites. This webinar will review a variety of online PD resources and share a list of others about AT devices and services. Also, ways that online PD can be included in your comprehensive AT professional development plan.

    When:
    Wednesday, April 2, 2014
    1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    $49.00
« First ‹ Previous 281 - 300 of 3981 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page