Date post: | 21-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
View: | 213 times |
Download: | 0 times |
Abandonment(and lack of adoption in the first place)
Why technology designed to help, fails to do so
Expectations
Expectations of the user are too high by either or both the caregivers and the user.
One may need to acknowledge that the users may not be as “smart” as they had dreamed. (H.’s mom made me take “communication wall” away because it was starting to show that H. didn’t know everything).
Expectations
Expectations are too low and the user is either board by the device and/or doesn’t use it because it is not useful to them.
Expectations
Expectations of the device and what it can do are to high by either or both the caregivers and users. A single device can not meet every sensory,
cognitive and physical need. People (often specialists) get comfortable
with one thing and try and make it work for all their clients. Companies promise the sky.
Social Aspects -
Isolation - because the user can now do something independently, they don’t get the human contact they received before.
People do not understand the device (e.g. difficult voice to understand, complex system like Mores code or icons that represent different things to different people).
What does this mean to you?
Social Aspects
Fear of success Things will change and change is
scary - independence is scary.They won’t need me anymore
Fear of failureFear can make users unwilling to give it their allFear can make caregivers unwilling to give their
child are real chance because they can’t deal with another failure.
Social Aspects
Families are used to the way things are. Your replacing what already works (I know
what they mean, even if no one else can).Learned helplessnessNot all members buy-inDoesn’t become incorporated into daily
life because its easier to do it for them in the short run.
Social Aspects
Fear that the device will provide their child a crutch and they will stop working towards self-sufficiency.
Social Aspects - Attitude
Don’t believe it will work.Feel isolated from the decision making
process.Cultural differences
Different cultures have different “solutions”
Social Aspects - Cultural
Device uses wrong sex or wrong ethnic group icons. Icons are usually designed for people with light skin. For a long time there was only one voice for communication devices and it was male. Now there are more of choices.
Social Aspects - Cultural
Wrong language (e.g. H. learning to use English communication device at school, but goes home to Spanish speaking family).
Difficulties for the Caregiver
To many, technology is intimidating.Not everyone knows (or wants to know)
how to use it.Programming difficulties (e.g. Dynovox or
Liberator) The more a device can do, and the more adaptable it is, the harder it is to program.
Not enough tech. Support (e.g. Words+)
Difficulties for the User
Technology is intimidating - this is particularly true for the elderly. Kids jump right in.
Difficulties for the User
Difficult to use Sensory (can’t see it well because of glare) Physically (its to hard to hit
the small buttons) Cognitively (I can’t
remember all those representations)
Difficulties for the User
Motivation to Complete a Task
________________________________
Physical Effort + Cognitive Effort + Linguistic Effort
+ Learning Effort + Memory Effort + Time Load
=
A.T. success
King, 1999
Difficulties for the User
There are no instant results. This can lead to disillusionment with the device.
Prevention of errors - users become frustrated if all they do is make mistakes at the beginning. Many need an errorless teaching approach.
Difficulties for the User
Safety - if something goes wrong there needs to be a safety mechanism (e.g panic button on MAPs, a way back to the last page on imail so you can make the correct choice, or an “oops I didn’t mean to say that” on a communication device).
Difficulties for the User
Device does not provide enough feedback. (e.g. I can’t tell if I pressed the button hard enough - I need a sound that let’s me know).
Difficulties for the User
User’s abilities change Their abilities improve Their abilities decrease Their abilities vary from day to day
Children get older Device no longer age appropriate Device no longer fits into the curriculum
Difficulties for User
User with a severe congenital physical disability didn’t learn cause and effect relationships. (e.g. Their movements were never tied to things that happened around them so they don’t understand that they have any power).
Caregivers didn’t teach such children about their effects.
Difficulties for the User &/or the Caregiver
The device is not intuitive in either how it is programmed or how it is used - They use “unnatural patterns of mapping” (King, 1999)
Mechanical Difficulties
Cumbersome to take around (many devices need to be big and durable for kids with vision, physical or behavioral problems, but this can cause them to be heavy. If its not light, they’re not going to lug it around).
Power supply drains to quickly (e.g M. can’t bring her device anywhere because the batter only lasts an hour).
Mechanical Difficulties
Breaks easily so you can’t rely on it. You need to have back-up system in place. (e.g. E.’s Dynovox getting erased from a low battery. A. just spilled O.J. into her Dynovox and now its out for a couple of months being repaired).
Mechanical Difficulties
It does not interface with other technologies because either it is to old, to new or a P.C. (in this district). (e.g. B.H.’s computer has no CD-Rom drive so I couldn’t give them Boardmaker).
Assistive Technology Specialists
Don’t say “this is the one.”Make sure users and their caregivers are
part of the decision making process.Don’t raise expectations to highDon’t try to solve every problem at onceShow, don’t just tell, families and teachers
how the technology can be integrated into daily life.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Provide on-going training and support to all caregivers involved.
Try to make the device mean less work rather than more work for the caregiver
Assistive Technology Specialists
Start with the basics. You may know that a child has all the potential in the world but they need to understand cause and effect relationships and their effect on the environment before they can reach that potential.
Start with simple to use devices, even if they limit the user to make it less intimidating to caregivers and users.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Start simple so results can be seen immediately.
Make technology show off strengths before it shows off weaknesses.
Provide errorless instruction so the user doesn’t make mistakes and avoids frustration
Make sure you set-up a way out if the user makes a mistake.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Start slowly so families can adapt and see the benefits of change.
Be patient with caregivers.Go slow because change can be scary -
let the user and his family set the pace.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Make sure the technology is adding to a persons life from their perspective and is not merely replacing.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Be sensitive to gender and ethnic differences. You can now get icons which represent people of different backgrounds.
Talk to families about what sort of icons make sense to them.
Be sensitive to “coolness” and age appropriateness of a device.
Assistive Technology Specialists
Make sure the device is going to meet the need that the user wants to meet.
Make sure the device is going to be adaptable to work with that user
Look visual, physical and cognitive loads involved - simultaneously!
Does the device provide enough feedback?
Assistive Technology Specialist
Have several systems in place when things don’t work or users abilities change from day to day.
Realize their isn’t one lifetime solution.Make sure that when your organizing
someone’s communication board, Intellikeys overlay or what not, you don’t use “unnatural patterns of mapping..”
Company Representatives
Don’t promise the answer to all their problems.
Be honest about what the machine can and can’t do.
Be there for technical support.Don’t force a “fit” just to make a sale. (D.
became a sales rep. for multiple products to avoid this).
Developers
Don’t try to help all users with all their problems in one device.
Need to be sensitive and think about the social/emotional aspects that go into using such a device.
Developers
Design it so users can have instant gratification and success.
Design it so users and caregivers can’t make mistakes when the start.
Make it intuitive.Build in safety mechanisms if a user or
programmer makes a mistake.
Developers
Be sensitive to cosmetic aspects of devices.
Design it with multi-cultural icons and voices.
Design it with male and female icons and voices.
Design it to be useful in multiple languages.
Developers
Keep programming simple. Allow for interface cross-over from other systems. Make it like regular computer interfaces.
vs
Keep it highly customizable. Sensory issues Cognitive load Physical load Feedback
Community
Become knowledgeable about assistive technology and peoples’ abilities.
Be helpfulBe open to different ways of doing things.