Assistive Technology Interview Questions

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Assistive Technology Interview Questions document sample

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							             Exploring Assistive
         Technology Issues in Reading
                 Assessment
                                ATIA 2010 Orlando:
                               Jason Altman, NCEO


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                         Statement of Problem
              • Little evidence that technology improves
                validity of tests for students w/ VI
              • One reason is that students’ experience
                and exposure to AT varies
              • TARA seeks to develop a test of student
                proficiency with AT
              • For use prior to using AT on large-scale
                reading assessments

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                     Preliminary Studies: The
                     State of AT Use with VI
                             Students
              • Study #1: TVI survey (presented at
                ATIA ’09)
              • Study #2: TVI follow-up interview
              • Study #3: Student Observational
                Interview

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                      Revisiting Teacher Survey
              • AT use is a large part of instruction for
                students with VI
              • TVIs take a “blended” approach to teaching
                reading (e.g., using a variety of modalities)
              • Standardization of assessments may be a
                challenge because students use different
                technology for different purposes



Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                        More on Teacher Survey
              • Reading and technology are intertwined
                activities for students with VI
              • The larger the caseload, the less likely
                students will have individualized AT
                experiences
              • Teachers who focus on foundational
                reading skills tend to provide fewer
                technology opportunities for students.


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                 Overview: Results of Teacher
                     Interview Study (#2)
              • 1st study showed “accommodations” or
                “modifications” are common for students w/
                VI
              • Both high- and low-tech approaches to
                teaching reading are used by TVIs
                   – Most likely for different purposes and at different
                     times
                   – Such flexible approaches to reading and
                     situational use of technologies create
                     challenges for standardization of assessments


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Method
              • Interviewed 27 TVIs
              • At least two TVIs were interviewed in the
                following categories:
                   – TVIs who work in Schools for the Blind
                   – TVIs who are itinerant teachers
                   – TVIs who teach students with low-vision
                   – TVIs who teach students who are completely
                     blind
                   – TVIs who do not teach braille
                   – TVIs who teach braille


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                 Instrument and Procedures
              • All interviews were conducted by telephone
              • In most cases, there were two (and up to
                four) researchers present during telephone
                interviews
              • Research participants were asked to answer
                a series of structured interview questions
              • Interviews generally lasted 30 minutes,
                although some interviews lasted as long as
                one hour

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Results
              • All 27 TVIs indicated that they would use a
                technology-based assessment if one were
                readily available
              • All TVIs who taught students with low-vision
                used at least some form of magnification
                equipment
              • TVIs who taught students who use braille
                readers also reported using a variety of
                technologies such as audio devices and
                braille note takers


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                Specific Products
              •   Alpha Smart
              •   Bookport
              •   Braille and Speak
              •   DAISY Readers
              •   Extreme Reader
              •   Freedom Box
              •   IPod
              •   JAWS
              •   Kurzweil
              •   MAGIC
              •   OpenBook
              •   OutSpoken
              •   PacMate
              •   Zoomtext




Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                     Technology and reading
              • Some TVIs used technology fluidly in instruction
              • Those who had wide-ranging knowledge of the
                tools available (and had access to such tools)
                match instructional tasks with technology tools.
              • 5 TVIs spent most of their time teaching students
                how to use CCTVs and were hesitant to engage
                in teaching students using computer-based tools
                (especially those that added voicing to files)
              • In all cases, however, TVIs used some form of
                technology to assist teaching


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                       Formal AT assessment
                             protocols
              • About 1 of 4 teachers were using formal assessment
                protocols/tools to assess students’ assistive technology
                use
              • Among those most frequently used are the SETT
                Protocol and the Texas School for the Blind Assistive
                Technology Assessment Summary for Students with
                Visual Impairments
              • One teacher who used the Texas assessment also
                mentioned using the Georgia Project for Assistive
                Technology’s (n.d.) Assistive Technology Evaluation
                and the Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiatives
                (2004) WATI Assistive Technology Checklist



Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                       Assessment: Proficient
                       Reader Who Uses AT
              • Teachers recognized that “advanced proficiency” in
                technology-assisted reading meant the ability to move fluidly
                between technologies in order to optimize the potential of
                various technologies
              • A proficient user of technology-assisted reading would be a
                reader who read and understood grade level material
                 – Most TVIs were concerned that their students be
                    assessed on grade-level, but with a fair opportunity to
                    demonstrate grade-level skills
                 – TVIs were concerned about the validity of tests



Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Discussion
              • There is a desire for a formal
                assessment or evaluation of student
                skills
              • Should discriminate between various
                levels of proficiency
              • There are a small number of
                assessments/frameworks in use

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Activity
              TVIs in this room: Had you been
               participants would have findings
               changed




Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                     Student Observational
                       Interview: Study #3




Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                 Method: Sample
              • Students with visual impairments in grades 6-
                10
              • In total, we interviewed 18 students for this
                study from 5 states across the US
              • We sampled students from both general
                education school systems (n=9) and state
                schools (n=5) for the blind
              • Four additional students were educated at
                state schools through general education
                classes in a nearby public school

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                         Method: Instrument and
                              Procedures
              • Students participated in “observational interviews”
                facilitated by three researchers on the project
                 – Observational interviews were a hybrid between
                   verbal interviews, where respondents describe
                   phenomenon (Bogdan & Biklen, 1998) and
                   cognitive interviews, where interviewees
                   participate in an activity and describe their
                   thoughts and actions (Ericsson & Simon, 1993)



Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                              Procedures (cont.)
              • During these interviews, students were
                asked to complete reading tasks using AT
                 – Afterward, students were asked how they
                   use AT in the reading process, including
                   how to download files, retrieve
                   information from printed material, and to
                   explain preferences
              • Each interview lasted between 30 and 60
                minutes
Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                    Results of Student Study
              • Demands of a rigorous high school
                curriculum at times left students without
                enough time to explore and become
                proficient in new and possibly more efficient
                technology strategies
              • For students with visual impairments reading
                large print or Braille, the time it takes to
                complete a task is often far greater than that
                for their peers with full functioning vision


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Results
              • 11 of the 18 students could read large
                print – 3 of them regular print as well,
                and many were audio book users.
              • The remaining 7 students all read braille
                – and 3 of the large print readers also
                read braille.
              • 13 students used audio books to access
                print no matter what their primary
                method of print reading was

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Results
              • 8 students used technology for reading
                Braille – 5 used Braille Note
              • For magnification, students used a variety of
                technologies, from simple handheld
                magnifiers to computer-based products
              • Zoomtext (most often also with speech),
                CCTV
              • Technology use for 7 depended on the
                reading situation

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Results
              • Technologies are sometimes
                unreliable (e.g., not all formats work
                for internet-based text), take time to
                learn, and do not always accompany
                the student beyond the school walls
                (e.g., many students cannot bring AT
                devices home to assist with
                homework)


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                     Student characteristics and
                           independence
              • Students varied from completely relying on
                help from sighted teachers, para-professionals,
                and peers to being assertively independent
              • Most students described their dependence on
                others as situational
              • One student mentioned that he is not afraid to
                ask his friends or family to read things for him
              • Another student, said that help is not needed


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                           Technology Choices
              • Depended on availability of technology in student
                location
              • For example, students at a state school typically
                would have more access to technology than a
                student in a rural public school that did not serve
                a large population of students with visual
                impairments
              • Access at home may differ from access at school
                   – One student, who was on the academic honor roll at
                     school, often stayed after school and came in before
                     school every morning to finish homework


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
              Choice of specific technology
              • The student’s TVI or para-professional
                generally was very involved in the decision
              • Some students attended technology
                conferences
              • It is important to note that another person
                (teacher, parent, or para-professional)
                needed to learn the technology along with the
                student
              • TVIs had to be careful not to over-extend
                themselves with multiple new technologies

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                    Role of expected change in
                             situation
              • Decisions were impacted by the nature
                of the visual impairments
              • Changes in student vision and forecasts
                for future change often called for a
                change in products
                   – For example, one student used a CCTV up
                     until 6th grade but stopped using it because
                     there was a decrease in his field of vision
                     and it was no longer practical


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                 Difficulty with AT
              • The amount of time that must be dedicated to
                training and practice in using the equipment
                sometimes outweighed the potential benefit of the
                technology.
              • Another complication was consistent access to
                technology
              • Students were sometimes forced to share
                technology with several other students, including
                CCTVs


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                   Other Hangups
              • There was also difficulty in transporting, setting
                up, and stowing equipment
              • Upon learning a particular technology platform,
                students were hesitant to move to other
                platforms
              • Equipment malfunction, or general hang-ups and
                glitches also were sometimes troublesome for
                students, teachers, and paraprofessionals alike.
              • One student stated that the Web sites that
                contained many graphics can be most
                problematic

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                        Testing and Large-Scale
                              Assessment
              • Multiple students reported using enlarged text
                to access the items and then having the
                paraprofessional fill in the bubble answer
                sheet
              • At least one student was able to take a math
                test using a computer; however, he was
                required to take the reading test using a
                paper and pencil version
              • Other students used standard question and
                answer forms, accessing them via CCTVs


Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Discussion
              • What do these findings mean for
                TVIs?
              • Does the situation play out similar in
                your classroom?
              • Would you agree that your student’s
                participation in large-scale
                assessment could be more
                meaningful?

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Conclusions
              • As statewide assessment policy is still
                in flux (Thurlow et al., 2006), it is
                important for research to continue in
                the area of technology-assisted
                reading to provide stakeholders with a
                clearer picture of the avenues that
                students with visual impairments take
                to access reading and
                demonstrate their reading skills

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                        Also at this Conference
              • Also see today from 2:45-3:45

              Bonaire 8 EDU-15
              Development of an Accountability Test
               to Measure a Student’s Ability to
               Access Text with AT

              Presenting: Laitusis, Hall

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
                                         Next Steps
              • Field Testing the new Technology
                Based Reading Assessment in school
                classrooms
              • We need your help!
                   – Administrators of the field test
                   – Students who can participate




Technology Assisted Reading Assessment
               Thank you! For more information…
    National Center on Educational Outcomes
    University of Minnesota
    612-626-1530        http://www.nceo.info

    Jason Altman                         altma014@umn.edu




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