M A C U L S I G Sp Ed1

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MACUL PreConference SIG SpEd presentation - March 5, 2008

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What Am I Going to Do on Monday to Ensure All Students Are Learning?

Chris Skoglund – Detroit Public SchoolsRose McKenzie – Jackson County ISD

Protopage

• Find all the links and info from today’s pre-conference at

• www.protopage.com/sigsped

Today’s Objectives

Explore a variety of low and high tech options for all learners devices, strategies, tools

Offer hands-on opportunities with low cost/free programs and Web 2.0 resources

Have fun

Presentation Symbols

•Group Survey

•Hands On

•Hyperlink – to website or file on CD

What Kind of Learner Are You?

Learning Preferences & Eye Movement

Visual – WordsVisual – Pictures

Auditory – Sounds

Linking to music

Kinesthetic –

Moving while learning

Auditory– Words

Listening to speech

Kinesthetic –

Writing or Drawing

How to get this info

How to get this info

into this student

Differentiating Textbooks

• Chapter-lets• Highlighting tape• Post Its• Dry Erase Markers• Editing Text in actual

textbook

Print, Cut and Fold

• This folder on your resource CD contains templates to use with– Microsoft Word or– PowerPoint

• For students to – Show what they know– Review/study guides

Click on the mouse to go to the

projects’ folder. Start with the PDF

directions.

For student who has difficulty with the textbook Vocabulary

• Can read most of the text• Struggles with decoding

some words• Difficulty with content

specific vocabulary

Visual Thesaurushttp://www.visualthesaurus.com

Answers.com

• http://www.answers.com/main/download_answers_win.jsp

• Alt Click on any word on your screen for the pronunciation & definition – plus more.

Sample support for term: Deposition

• Use video from UnitedStreaming or

•Get Images from NetTrekker or Google

NetTrekker

• Teacher resource• Available free by registering for

LearnPort• Shows readability level of

websites • Great place to search for

websites that differentiate by specific grade or ability level

• Includes Read aloud

Hands On

• Tryout– NetTrekker– Answers.com– Visual Thesaurus– Children’s Talking Dictionary

• Look at – UnitedStreaming website

For the student who has difficulty READING the textbook

• Significant difficulty decoding most of the words in the textbook

• Understands the text when it is read aloud to him/her

Text Readers

I use them all the time I know about them, bu...

Huh?

0% 0%0%

10

1. I use them all the time2. I know about them, but

don’t use them3. Huh?

Answer Now

Rivers and Streams

• Scanned with OCR software

Text Readers

• Universal Reader by Premier AT– www.readingmadeeasy.com

• Read OutLoud by Don Johnston– www.donjohnston.com

• Read Please (on laptop)– www.readplease.com

• Natural Reader (on laptop)– www.naturalreaders.com

Natural Reader

Electronic Text• Online Children’s Stories

– http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/~dkbrown/stories.html• Accessible Book Collection

– http://www.accessiblebookcollection.org/ • Texas Assistive Tech. Network

– http://www.texasat.net/default.aspx?name=links.digitalresources

• Bookshare– http://www.bookshare.org/web/Welcome.html

• Project Gutenberg– http://promo.net/pg/

• LD Resources– http://www.ldresources.org/?cat=22

• Online Books Page– http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/

Hands On

• Try out Natural Reader or ReadPlease on your laptop.

• Look through the electronic text sources.

Audio books

Record your own text to play on a computer, CD or MP3 player

• Audacity (on laptop)– http://audacity.sourceforge.net/dow

nload/windows– Free– Saving in MP3 format requires

libmp3lame file -also free

• Super Sound Recorder– http://www.sound-recorder.info/ – $29.95– Saving in MP3 capability included

Audacityhttp://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/

Sources for Audible Books

• Lit2Go– http://etc.usf.edu/lit2go/

• Free Classic Audio Books– http://freeclassicaudiobooks

• Simply Audio Books - fee– http://www.simplyaudiobooks.com/

• Audible.com – fee – http://www.audible.com

• Repeat After Us– http://www.repeatafterus.com/

Using our headsets

• Red always plugs in the microphone outlet

• Black always plugs in the headphone outlet

Look at the headset plugs:

•Put the plug closest to the color red into the microphone outlet•Put the other plug into the headphone outlet

Hands On

• Make a recording using Audacity• Plug in your headphone set• Open Audacity

• Note: The toolbar’s Rewind, Play, Record, Pause, Stop, Fast-forward work just like a tape player.

• Want more help? See document, “How to use Audacity,” on resource disk.

Ella Enchanted 3 Audio Samples

• Purchased from Random House Listening Library– 18.50 =s/h

• Obtained free from R.E.S.C.U.E.

• Obtained from Accessible Book Collection; use Natural Reader to read it.

Storyline Onlinehttp://www.storylineonline.net/

Great children's’

books read by well

known people.

Are you attending David Grapka’s session this PM?

0%

0%

10

1. YES !!

2. No

Answer

Now

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Is Like Differentiated Instruction (DI) on Steroids!

David Grapka will delight and entertain as he shares successes and challenges implementing UDL in New York. Come see how TRE (the equivalent of MITS) developed units using the Pyramid Planning Model. This hands-on, fast-paced workshop will provide information and resources for integrating all students successfully in your classroom! A must for general education teachers of all levels with additional resources for special educators ready to meet the challenge of the at-risk learner. Did you know you could have fun while you learn?

More from David Grapka

• The Technology Blues: Pickin' Through the Solutions to Meet the Needs of ALL StudentsThursday, March 6, 2008 2:30 p.m.Pantlind Ballroom

• How to Put the “U” in Universal Design: Understanding People to Unify the System With Ubiquitous Technology Thursday, March 6, 2008 4:00 p.m.Pantlind Ballroom 

Project Coordinator, Technology Resources for Education (TRE) Center Sponsored by Michigan's Integrated Technology Supports (MITS)

Microsoft Office

• Not typically the friendliest office suite for students

• But most classrooms have it – So its almost like its free

• It can be customized to provide support to struggling learners– audio support– simplified menus

PowerPoint Books

• You can use PowerPoint to make books accessible – Scan pages– Add audio clips– All within PowerPoint

PowerTalk

• http://www.oatsoft.org/Software/PowerTalk/downloads/1.2.10/?searchterm=Powertalk

• Speaks text on Windows PowerPoint

• Narrates without recording speech• Computer/digitized voice• Free

• http://www.oatsoft.org/Software/wordtalk/?searchterm=word

• Works with all versions of MSWord• Speaks and highlights text• Talking dictionary• Adjust speed, voice, highlight• Too lengthy to download here• Free

WordTalk

Auto Summary

• MS Word can provide a summary of text that– Highlights text w/in document– Inserts summary text in the

beginning of the document– Creates separate document with

summary extract

• Can set length of summary

Auto Summary - MSWord

• Open the document• Under Tools go to

– Auto Summarize

• Select – 1 of the 4 types of

summary – % for the length of

summary – Click OK

• Try it again with another summary type.

Readability – MS Word

• Microsoft Word can provide a reading grade level.

• You need to turn this option on

• Then enter text in a MS Word doc

• Readability statistics are provided at the end of a spell check.

Readability

• In Microsoft Word• Go to Tools –

– Options– Spelling &

Grammar • Under Grammar

check the– Show readability

statistics • Click OK

Readability

• Enter a sample of text into MSWord with a least one spelling error.

• Run spell check found under tools.

• After checking spelling MSWord provides these statistics.

Click fo

r

doc to try

Beginner’s Toolbar

• Make a toolbar with only the tasks you want available to the student– Keep it simple– No room for error

Make your own MS Word toolbar

• Find step by step directions in Word Workshop for Teachers p.50– By Tom Snyder Press– Listed on resource slide

• Or under MS Word Help find– Create custom toolbar– Add a button to toolbar– Delete a button

This slid

e will

help

if you fo

rget how or

if we d

on’t get

to

this part

during

training.

Resources

• Differentiating Textbooks: Strategies to Improve Student Comprehension and Motivation

• by Char Forsten, Jim Grant and Betty Hollas– Crystal Springs Books– 75 Jaffrey Road P.O. Box 500– Peterborough, NH 03458– 1-800-321-0401– www.crystalsprings.com

Resources

• The Wonderful World of Word

• by Judi Sweeney– Onion Mountain Technology– 74 Sextons Hollow Road– Canton, CT 06019– 1-860-693-2683

– www.onionmountaintech.com

Resources

• Word Workshop for Teachers• by Janet Caughlin

– Tom Snyder Productions– 80 Coolidge Hill Road– Watertown MA 02472– 1-800-304-1254

– www.tomsnyder.com

Resources

• Dinah Zike’s Big Book of Projects & Big Book of Books and Activities

• by Dinah Zike– Dinah Might Adventures, LP– P.O. Box 690328– San Antonio, TX 78269– 1-800-99-DINAH Orders only– www.dinah.com