Posted by: ghotit on: June 12, 2009
The student body, especially in colleges and universities has become mobile. Laptop penetration and wireless connectivity is very prevalent in many schools. This translates from a technological perspective, that any student can access the internet and the services it offers from anywhere in the school’s campus.
For a student with dyslexia, ESL or ADHD or any other student needing a writing assistive solution this can mean a dramatic change. Many schools today offer writing assistive solutions. But in order for the student to enjoy these services, the student usually needs to go to assistive technology/computer center since the assistive technology is installed only on the desktops found in these centers.
Now what if these very same assistive technologies would be available for all students and they can be accessed from anywhere in the campus?
Imagine the benefits to a student that can open and use the required assistive technology during class, in the library, or anywhere within the school’s campus?
There are some key challenges that need to be addressed by writing assistive solutions to make this a reality:
It is because these challenges are not being addressed, there is today a grand miss of leveraging mobile technologies to benefit students with writing disabilities.
Ghotit, an innovative provider of writing assistive technology, addresses these issues and limitations with an innovative campus-aware licensing model that gives all students within a campus FREE USAGE of all of its services.
For more details on this subject you can read my article: Assistive Technology and the Mobile Student Body.
Interesting article. I have been thinking about these questions with regard to my own dyslexia. For me the issue is time / date management and organization.
I blogged about this and received comments from many different people sharing the technologies that they use.
I finally came to the conclusion that a combination of smartphone and netbook is probably the best thing to help me in this respect.
Mobile, as you say.
June 17, 2009 at 12:45 PM
Hi Rod,
Can you share with us the link to the blog you mentioned, so that we can look it up?
Thanks, Ofer