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November 18, 2011

Cancer and Young Adulthood Research

Dear Students,

This is a blog from the Cancer and Young Adulthood Research Team here at the University. We are an interdisciplinary team concerned with what living with cancer is like for young adults. We are presently looking to speak with young adults, aged 18 to 45, who have been diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives. We welcome the participation of anyone who wishes to share his or her experiences of cancer. Those who volunteer for the study will be asked to participate in a confidential interview that may be about 90 minutes long, and/or to write a short personal account of their experience. We will provide a token of appreciation for your help. If you are interested in participating, or would like to enquire more about the study, please feel free to contact Chad Hammond, Devon Andersen, or Dr. Ulrich Teucher, by email at illness.stories@gmail.com, or by phone at 966-2996. Thank you very much for your time and consideration!

Our contact address:
Cancer and Young Adulthood Research Team
Chad Hammond, Devon Andersen, and Dr. Ulrich Teucher
Department of Psychology, University of Saskatchewan
9 Campus Drive, Saskatoon SK S7N 5A5
Tel: (306) 966-2996
Email: illness.stories@gmail.com

Is Salman Khan the New Andrew Carnegie?

From The New York Times: http://ideas.time.com/2011/11/16/salman-kahn-the-new-andrew-carnegie/

Meet Salman Khan, your child's new teacher. If you haven’t heard of Khan, rest assured that your son or daughter is in good hands. He has four degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard. He got a perfect score on the math portion of his SAT. And he's very experienced, having taught more than 85 million lessons to students all over the world.

Khan is the former hedge fund manager who set out to tutor his young cousin in math with a homemade video he posted online. From that modest beginning has grown the Khan Academy, a free online library of more than 2,700 videos offering instruction in everything from algebra to computer science to art history. Running the nonprofit academy is now Khan's full-time job, and he plans to expand the enterprise further, adding more subject areas, more faculty members (until now, all the videos have been narrated by Khan himself) and translating the tutorials into the world's most widely used languages.

Much attention has been paid to the use of Khan Academy videos in classrooms. Hundreds of schools across the U.S. have integrated his lessons into their curricula, often using them to "flip" the classroom: students watch the videos at home in the evening, then work on problem sets — what would once have been homework — in class, where there are teachers to help and peers to interact with. The approach is promising, and it may well change the way American students are taught.

The real revolution represented by Khan Academy, however, has gone mostly unremarked upon. The new availability of sophisticated knowledge, produced by a trusted source and presented in an accessible fashion, promises to usher in a new golden age of the autodidact: the self-taught man or woman. Not just the Khan Academy, but also the nation's top colleges and universities are giving away learning online. Khan's alma mater, MIT, has made more than 2,000 of its courses available gratis on the Internet. Harvard, Yale, Berkeley, Johns Hopkins and Carnegie Mellon are among the other elite institutions offering such free education. When Stanford announced last August that it would be opening to the online public a course on artificial intelligence, more than 70,000 people signed up within a matter of days. The course's two professors say they were inspired to disseminate their lessons by the example of Salman Khan. Khan Academy's own videos now go well beyond basic algebra to teach college-level calculus, biology and chemistry.

Read the full story at: http://ideas.time.com/2011/11/16/salman-kahn-the-new-andrew-carnegie/

Is English Making Us Dyslexic?

From The New York Times: http://ideas.time.com/2011/11/02/are-americans-more-dyslexic-than-italians/#ixzz1e5Nef2RE

At my house, the mealtime implement used for cutting is called a ka-nife. The joint located between thigh and calf is called a ka-nee. And the medieval warriors who wore suits of armor are called ka-ni-guh-ts.

We adopted these unusual pronunciations after my 5-year-old son, Teddy, noticed something odd about the English language. While sounding out words on the page in the way we'd taught him, he realized that many words didn't sound at all the way they looked. Yacht. Trough. Colonel. And what was that letter k doing at the start of words that sounded like they began with n?

Such irregular spellings, my husband and I explained, were the result of the English language's long, rich history: a mix of Anglo-Saxon, Latin, Greek, French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, among other languages, melded over centuries of use. Teddy was unimpressed. Words should sound the way they look, he insisted: hence, ka-nife.

As anyone who's lost a spelling bee or failed a spelling test will affirm, the English language is more ornery than most. About 25 percent of its words employ irregular spellings, and many of these terms are among the most frequently used in the language. Cross-cultural research demonstrates that the trickiness of English affects how quickly American children learn to read and write. After just a few months of instruction, for example, children living in Italy are able to read and write any word they encounter, because their language is almost perfectly regular: each letter or combination of letters maps reliably onto a particular sound. Children in the U.S., on the other hand, must endure years of drills before they have mastered the intricacies of bough and bow, weigh and way. (American pupils can console themselves with the knowledge that kids in China have it even harder: there, lessons on reading and writing the thousands of symbols in the Chinese language extend into students' teenage years.)

Big deal, you might think — so it takes a few years to learn written English. With practice, our peculiar spellings become second nature. But there is evidence that for some English users, the knottiness of the language leads to lasting problems with reading. About twice as many Americans as Italians fit the definition of dyslexic, even though brain-scan studies suggest that the two populations have similar proportions of people with the mental processing deficit associated with the disorder. The irregularity of English ruthlessly exposes this brain anomaly, while the consistency of the Italian language allows readers to compensate for it. Dyslexia, remarkably enough, may be partly culturally induced.

Read more: http://ideas.time.com/2011/11/02/are-americans-more-dyslexic-than-italians/#ixzz1e5Nef2RE

Man files lawsuit against Washburn, health care contractor after incident involving ADHD medication

From: LJWorld.com: http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2011/nov/07/man-files-suit-against-washburn-contractor/

A Lawrence man has filed a federal lawsuit against Washburn University in Topeka and a health care contractor at a Kansas prison, alleging he was unfairly dismissed from Washburn's clinical psychology graduate program and an internship for an incident involving his ADHD medication.

The suit was filed recently on behalf of Ryan Talley, 30. His attorney Tony Shapiro alleged Washburn officials violated the Americans with Disabilities Act because they dismissed Talley based on his ADHD and need to use medication — he was prescribed Adderall — to treat it. Shapiro also alleged Washburn denied Talley a "reasonable accommodation," in violation of the act.

"As a result of the plaintiff's dismissal from Washburn University, the plaintiff has been unable to obtain his degree or his license as a psychologist and unable to pursue a career as a psychologist, and has, therefore, suffered irreparable damage, including past and future earnings, mental anguish and emotional distress," Shapiro wrote in initial complaint.

Read the full story at: http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2011/nov/07/man-files-suit-against-washburn-contractor/

More Answers to Your Questions on Applying to University With a Learning Disability

From The New York Times: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/08/marybeth-2/

Q. My son has Dyspraxia, a disorder that impacts motor skill development, and has an aide to help him with assisted typing. Is there any obligation or any type of service available at the college level to provide him with an aide? — Mike

A. It is really important that your son learn in high school the strategies that will help him compensate for Dyspraxia. Progressing from needing an aide to self-sufficiency in high school is key to helping students be independent in college. Check with your high school to find out what they may recommend and what technology is available so that your son is proficient in it before matriculating to college.

Many colleges have outstanding technology available on campus, including programs that can highlight and provide note-taking support, auditory programs that will spell-check work and voice-activated programs that can write and edit documents.

Colleges are not obligated by law to provide aides. Based on appropriate documentation, however, colleges can provide note-takers, scribes, class notes, and voice-activated computer programs for assistance with voice-to-text. More specifically, a scribe will write down exactly what a student dictates. The student can review what is written and ask the scribe to make any corrections. Scribes are also responsible for spelling and punctuation. This particular accommodation might be helpful for your student.

If there is a need for one-on-one aide support, then this usually requires the student to pay. It is extremely important that the student or family asks each of the colleges they are considering to provide details on what kind of support and technology are available to students with disabilities.

Q. Most colleges require a current assessment to certify a student for services related to a learning disability. High schools in Virginia retest students every three years. Our dilemma is this: most students at the time of retest are under 18 years old and are evaluated using child norms. Colleges will not accept these results even if a student has been identified since elementary school; they require a test based on adult norms. The student ends up having an expensive high school test that can't be used to qualify for college disability services. Then parents have to pay for a private test within a year. The major difference in the test is the use of adult norms. Is there any hope for a change in policies like this? — Ruth Hylton

Read the full story at: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/08/marybeth-2/

Answers to Your Questions on Applying to University With a Learning Disability

From The New York Times: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/07/marybeth-one/?ref=education

The Choice has lined up Marybeth Kravets to field questions this week about applying to college with a learning disability, the subject of my column published over the weekend in The Times's Education Life supplement.

Ms. Kravets, the former president of the National Association for College Admission Counseling, is the co-author of "The K & W Guide to Colleges for Students with Learning Disabilities Or Attention Deficit Disorder." She is also is chief education officer of the Chicago Scholars Foundation.

In this first batch of answers, Ms. Kravets addresses questions on test scores and foreign language requirement waivers. Answers to additional questions will continue this week.

Readers can still submit questions for Ms. Kravets by using the comment box on the original post, or by starting a new stream on the thread below. (Selected questions may have been edited.)

Read the full story at: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/07/marybeth-one/?ref=education

Learning Disabilies at University and College

From The New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/06/education/edlife/hard-decisions-for-learning-disabled.html?_r=2

The admissions process can be stressful for even the most gifted, organized students. But to applicants with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or learning disabilities, the path to college can feel like a maze. The Choice addresses some of the issues such students face.

Marybeth Kravets, an educational consultant and past president of the National Association for College Admission Counseling, is answering questions this week on applying to college with a learning disability. She is the co-author of "The K & W Guide to Colleges for Students With Learning Disabilities or Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder."

1. Should a student who has struggled with A.D.H.D. or dyslexia disclose it when applying to college?

The answer, like so many aspects of college admissions, depends mightily on the particular student. (Testing companies keep confidential whether a student was given extra time on the SAT and ACT, so that's not an issue here.) Edward de Villafranca, an independent consultant and former admissions officer and high school counselor, puts it this way: "The decision to disclose or not isn't actually one of 'Will it hurt my chances?' but rather one of 'Is it helpful to know?'"

Disclosure early in the admissions process is often recommended for applicants who need to provide context — a legitimate reason grades might have dipped uncharacteristically from 9th to 10th grade, or why a standardized test score seems abysmally low when compared with an otherwise stellar academic record.

On the other hand, an applicant with strong grades and test scores may decide not to raise a red flag — maybe learning issues were not an academic impediment, or are no longer relevant.

"The primary risk is having the essay read by someone who doesn't understand learning disabilities, someone who thinks A.D.H.D. is a hyperactive kid in fifth grade bouncing off the walls," said Rachel Masson, director of admissions at Landmark College in Putney, Vt., which offers an associate's degree and is exclusively for students with conditions that impair learning. "Legally, of course, admissions officers are not supposed to hold it against a student," she added. "The reality is, we're all human and there is that human factor involved."

However, Ms. Masson suggests that once admitted but before putting down a deposit, all candidates with issues seek out the campus office that coordinates support services.

Read the full story at: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/06/education/edlife/hard-decisions-for-learning-disabled.html?_r=2

Wireless Calculators

From http://www.keloland.com/News/NewsDetail6373.cfm?Id=123652

SIOUX FALLS, SD - It does not seem like too long ago the black board was the biggest learning tool in the classroom, but the big piece of slate and dusty chalk have long since been laid to rest in favor of more cutting-edge devices.

It really is simple addition; math plus technology equals engaged students and one very happy teacher.

"I get the chance to immediately correct misconceptions. I get a chance to immediately improve upon their technical vocabulary," Mary Coyne, Lincoln High School AP Calculus teacher, said.

It is all made possible with this the latest T.I. Nspire calculator. It looks like a regular calculator and can add, subtract, multiply and divide, but it can wirelessly connect to Coyne's computer.

Just like logging onto the internet at a coffee shop, students log onto a network with these calculators. Coyne can easily see how her students are doing the math problems from her desk. Three out of 16 math classes at Lincoln High School are using this technology, which is bolstering an interactive method called action/consequence learning. Coyne said being connected this way helps her know her students' problem areas the day they are going over a certain lesson plan.

"It gives me an idea of how they're processing the information because the way they communicate back to me is immediate feedback and I can get a feel of whether or not they are grasping the concept of what I am teaching. It's not just me spilling it out to them; they have to engage in their own learning," Coyne said.

Read the full story at: http://www.keloland.com/News/NewsDetail6373.cfm?Id=123652

November 17, 2011

Rejecting the value of a college degree - private schools for lifelong learning

What is a university? There’s a legal answer to that question, of course, as well as historical, philosophical, instructional, and civic. And strictly by some of these definitions, General Assembly doesn’t qualify as a university. There are no degrees awarded. There is no .edu Web domain. There is no football team.

And yet the New York City-based organization has a “campus.” It offers classes in engineering and entrepreneurship. It even offers certification. And by some accounts at least, what General Assembly offers the New York City community (and soon London, too) is very possibly the future of higher education. At the very least, it could be the future of more informal, lifelong learning.

For more information: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/new-york-citys-general-assembly-the-university-of-the-future/

Redit image: courage, fun and tenacity

these two are an inspiration

Can an Online Game Crack the Code to Language Learning?

What can possibly get kids excited to learn a dead language? This was the challenge for Latin teacher Kevin Ballestrini.

Ideally, he could take the entire class to Rome and walk them through the ruins, where they could practice speaking the language while learning the history. He found a way to do it — at least in the virtual world.

Ballestrini has turned his introductory Latin class at Connecticut’s Norwich Free Academy into an alternate reality. The students’ job: to save the world by joining a shadowy organization on a quest to find the Lapis Saeculōrum that was part of an Ancient Roman society.

“Mr. Bal told us this isn’t school anymore,” says 10th-grader Caroline Scheck. “He told us, ‘You’re on a mission to save the world.’ Naturally, we all thought he was crazy. He even asked, ‘Who thinks I’m crazy?’ and a few of us raised our hands.”
“I took Spanish for four years and I don’t think I’ve learned as much as I have in that class as I have in just two months.”

But there’s a method to the madness. “It’s a mix of a role-playing game and an alternate reality game,” Ballestrini says. Students play the role of Romans in a reconstruction of ancient Pompeii (or ancient Rome) and have to learn to think, act, create and write like a Roman in order to win the game. And those are the same goals of any introductory Latin course.

Using an online portal, student teams direct their character in Latin to find mysterious inscriptions on stones and solve mysteries. Then they can see how other teams’ characters responded to the prompts. Much of the action takes place in the “TSTT-interface – a sophisticated simulation cleverly disguised as an Internet forum. Each night, the students receive, in a forum post that pretends to be a “TSTT immersion session,” a new piece of the narrative and a prompt to which their team’s Roman must respond.

“Each individual student is responsible for his or her contribution so the group product is never anything that affects their grades,” Ballestrini says. “I give experience points for completing tasks instead of grades, and then when it’s time to report grades, the student and I have a conversation about their progress and decide the right grade.”

In its second year, the game is now being run in 30 classrooms across the country and can be done with as little tech as pen and paper or as fully tech integrated as mobile phones and a full Web site. Ballistrini is excited to see the game expanding beyond just his classroom. He’s started a company with his research partner Roger Travis to capture this new style of learning through engaging games.

But most importantly, his students are loving it, too.

“Latin is my favorite class,” said Peter Liang, a 9th grader in Ballestrini’s class. “I look forward to it every day. The class is funny because some missions, you have to go back in time and create a battle scene. It’s so much better than learning from a book! We go on a Web site and get to use Latin every day. And not just for 60 minutes in class. We have to think of sentence structures and the online opportunity.”

Another student observes a huge difference in how the game format has helped her learn this obsolete language. “I took Spanish for four years and I don’t think I’ve learned as much as I have in that class as I have in just two months,” said Caroline Scheck. “I can write sentences because we’re using it like we’re writing a story. As a child, you’d learn Latin by people speaking to you in sentences. You know how sometimes in languages you just learn words and then later on you use sentences? This time, we’re just learning it as if someone was speaking to us.”
“Rather than coming into class with their homework done entirely wrong, I’m catching the misconceptions well in advance, and have a better understanding of what they’re understanding.”

Apart from student engagement, Ballestrini believes this class structure accomplishes a few other important objectives: It matches the exact curriculum goals, teaches students to flex their online skills, and it alerts him to potential problems in students’ learning process. The students who are excelling mentor the struggling students, as together they figure out the correct Latin text that will control the character.

What’s more, Ballestrini feels he gets to know his students better.

“Each night, I get to see insights into their thinking in ways I’ve never been able to see before,” he says. “It allows me some great affordances where I can jump in at 7:30 at night and say, ‘You’re on track,’ or, ‘There’s a conceptual problem and let’s take a look at why.’ So rather than coming into class with their homework done entirely wrong, I’m catching the misconceptions well in advance, I’m doing work I feel is more productive and have a better understanding of what they’re understanding.”

Is his experiment a success? It may be too early to tell, but it will be interesting to see if the game successfully transfers to the other 30 courses.

http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/can-an-online-game-crack-the-code-to-language-learning/

Deaf Lufkin DE meshes silent world with contact sport

SHENANDOAH - Demontrai Lewis relies on the vibrations. Each time the junior crouches on Lufkin's defensive line, a pulsation - which starts in his toes - triggers his instincts.

It's a unique sensation, one that most people can't comprehend. Then again, Lewis is deaf, forced to depend on his other senses in a silent world.

But on the football field, Lewis' impact is far from quiet, having recorded 48 tackles and eight sacks this season. When the defensive end takes the field Friday in the Class 5A Division II bi-district game against Westfield in Huntsville, he'll enter empowered by the adversity he has overcome.

"I just felt like I was all alone (as a kid)," Lewis said through interpreter Rene Heintschel. "Everybody else was hearing, and nobody deaf was around, so I didn't know how to communicate with people. Hearing people (didn't) know how to take me."

That's how the Trinity resident first landed at Lufkin ISD. Since the district has programs that cater to deaf students, he was granted permission to make the daily 50-mile commute to and from school.

Even with those resources, Lewis' introduction to football was daunting. Lewis said his middle school coaching staff tried him at tailback but struggled to convey the concepts to him. As a result, he wound up getting pummeled in the backfield.

"There were a lot of misunderstandings because I didn't know what the coaches wanted me to do," Lewis said.

Once they realized he preferred to deliver beatings than receive them, Lewis was shifted to defensive end and blossomed into a varsity starter as a sophomore.

"Even though he can't hear, he works so hard to succeed and become a better player," senior defensive end Tomme Mark said. "I see him, his struggles and what he has to do to be a good football player, and I use it as motivation to be even better."

It motivates team-mates to learn sign language, too. Although Lewis can read lips, it isn't uncommon to see players and coaches pound their chests twice, sign language for "I love you."

But the hearing handicap has also accelerated Lewis' development. Hunched down in the trenches, he is able to ignore all distractions, from the screaming in the stands to trash talk.

"He never jumps offsides, because he has to watch the football," Lufkin coach John Outlaw said. "Some other players have someone trying to (make them) jump on a hard count, but he's never going to do that."

Still, Lewis yearns to hear the sounds that embody Friday night football. The booming bass from the band. The screaming cheerleaders. The boisterous crowd. He would love to listen to it all.

So the Panthers' fans keep him involved. Whenever Lewis records a sack, they raise their hands and twist their wrists in unison, a gesture widely known as "deaf applause."

"It makes me feel good that they are trying to communicate with me," Lewis said, "because I'm always trying to communicate with them as well."

Lewis is determined to compete at the collegiate level.

"(Deaf kids) can go to college. They can go to the NFL," he said. "There are no limits."

http://www.chron.com/sports/highschool/article/Deaf-Lufkin-DE-meshes-silent-world-with-contact-2263472.php

People With Disabilities Face Digital Divide

From Disability Scoop: http://www.disabilityscoop.com/2011/11/11/feds-digital-divide/14432/

Even as more Americans gain high-speed Internet access in their homes, those with disabilities continue to lag behind.

Of households headed by those with disabilities, just 43 percent had broadband Internet access in 2010. That compares to 72 percent among those without disabilities, according to a report released this week from the U.S. Department of Commerce.

The data comes from a survey of over 54,000 American households on Internet usage that was conducted by the Census Bureau last fall.

Socioeconomic factors appear to be a major reason behind the lack of Internet access among those with disabilities, the report found. When researchers controlled for income, education, age and other demographic and geographic variables, the disparity in access between those with and without disabilities dropped to only about 6 percent.

“Closing the broadband adoption gap is a priority because Americans increasingly need 21st century skills to succeed in today’s economy,” said Rebecca Blank, acting deputy commerce secretary, who notes in the report that Internet access is often critical to obtaining employment.

In addition to people with disabilities, the Commerce Department report also highlights other groups that are less likely to have broadband access including those who are black, Hispanic and less educated in addition to rural residents.

Bursaries for mature woman and Aboriginal woman

Deadline for applications is January 12, 2012 Business Professional Women of Saskatoon (BPW) website: http://www.bpwsaskatoon.com/

Each year the Business Professional Women’s Club of Saskatoon offers bursaries to women who are pursuing post-secondary education and are in need of financial assistance.
2012 BPW Saskatoon Mature Female Student Bursary:
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
Business and Professional Women’s Club Saskatoon Inc. awards an educational bursary each year to a mature woman advancing her career through education and based on financial need.

WHO IS ELIGIBLE:
• Female post secondary student
• Age – 30 Plus
• Applicants registered in a recognized training and/or educational institution Full time is considered as post secondary with at least a 60 % schedule per term Students with permanent disabilities, at least a 40% schedule per term (Applicants completing a 40% course load must provide proof of a permanent disability)
Details & Application:
http://www.bpwsaskatoon.com/images/bursaries 2012/BPW 2012 - Bursary - Mature Female.pdf

2012 TD Waterhouse PIA Female Aboriginal Female Student Bursary:
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
The Business and Professional Women’s Club Saskatoon Inc. along with TD Waterhouse PIA award an educational bursary each year to an aboriginal female student advancing her career through education and based on financial need.
WHO IS ELIGIBLE:
• Aboriginal female undergraduate student
• Applicants should self declare and provide proof of ancestry. Proof could include a copy of a status card for First Nation applicants who are status Indian under the Indian Act, Metis can provide a membership card to their metis local, or if applicants provide a sworn affidavit establishing their lineage this can be considered.
• Age 18 – 30
• Applicants registered in a recognized training and/or educational institution Full time is considered as post secondary with at least 60% schedule per term Students with permanent disabilities, at least 40% schedule per term (Applicants completing a 40% course load must provide proof of a permanent disability)
Details & Application:
http://www.bpwsaskatoon.com/images/bursaries 2012/BPW 2012 - Bursary - Aborginal Female 18 - 30.pdf

November 10, 2011

Barriers - Seen and Unseen

A colleague in a wheelchair goes into an underground passage connecting two campus buildings. Once the entrance locks behind him, he discovers that the door at the other end refuses to open with his swipe card. Although he is a vigorous man of middle age, the maintenance worker who comes to his rescue calls him Pops.

A student with a sensory-processing disorder needs to sit in the front row of class and take notes on a laptop computer, but the professor insists that laptops may be used only in the back of the room. After the student explains her situation, he announces to the entire class that he is making a "special exception" for her.

http://chronicle.com/article/Bring-Down-the-Barriers-Seen/129648/?sid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en">The Chronicle of Higher Education article on barriers both physical and attitudinal

Larry Carlson, Disability Programs manager from Regina expresses his appreciation for disability services for students in his area:
"Thanks to very capable counseling, which is where appropriate services must begin, and grants to cover extraordinary costs; not to mention an atmosphere of acceptance, I think (Disability Services registered) students' needs are being met very well indeed" (November 10th, 2011)

November 08, 2011

Training Opportunity for Self-Employment

Typewell is a software system that allows typists to quickly and accurately transcribe speech to text, in order to facilitate communication for people who are deaf or hard of hearing. TypeWell is a system for transcribing speech to text. Typewell may be used in all sorts of situations: classes, labs, meetings, conferences, job interviews, etc.

It can be difficult for deaf and hard of hearing people to arrange captioning services in Saskatoon. Becoming a self-employed Typewell captionist could lead to a profitable home business. Depending on the type of software you choose, you could also offer the service remotely via internet (eg provide services to clients outside of saskatoon, without having to leave your own home).

To be a transcriber, one must type at least 60 wpm without errors, have excellent listening skills, quickly understand and write English as effortlessly as a well-educated native speaker, enjoy working in school settings, and have some knowledge of computers and word processing. In addition, we recommend that candidates have no history of pain in the arms or wrist that might suggest a tendency toward repetitive motion disorders.

Ideally, Typewell captionists should work 10 to 30 hours a week. This is because a transcriber should not type full time so as to protect his or her body from repetitive motion injury and other possible ergonomic strain. Also, just as with sign language interpreting, the mental concentration and physical work of transcribing can be very fatiguing for a transcriber. After an hour or more of transcribing without a break, the quality of the information provided to the reader can decrease significantly. Thus, a typical schedule includes transcribing two or three courses a semester/term, with time allotted in the transcriber's schedule for editing each day.

To become a TypeWell transcriber, a person completes a distance-learning transcribing course to learn how to listen to lectures and discussions and type a meaning-for-meaning transcription of what is heard. The course costs $400USD.

In addition to the cost of training, the transcriber is required to buy Typewell software ($300 or $600, depending on the type chosen); and the necessary equipment (including at least one laptop).

Please check out the Typewell website for more information (http://typewell.com/home.html). The staff at Disability Services for Students at the U of S (dss@usask.ca) may also be able to offer some information.

Can Everyone Be Smart at Everything?

From Mind/Shift: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/can-everyone-be-smart-at-everything/

When a student gets a good grade, wins an award, or proudly holds up a painting, we all know by now that we're not supposed to say, "Good job!" Praising the achievement rather than the effort will backfire.

To a kid, "Good job" means "You're smart" or "You're talented" — the praise goes to inherent, natural-born abilities or intelligence. But that immediate spark of self-pride will turn into deep self-doubt when the child invariably comes across a bigger challenge and doesn't immediately succeed.

Kids who are praised for their intelligence end up caring more about grades, trophies, and awards than those who are praised for their effort, according to the famous 1998 Stanford report "Effects of Intelligence and Effort Praise" by Claudia Mueller and Carol Dweck. The study showed that "after failure, [kids] also displayed less task persistence, less task enjoyment, more low-ability attributions, and worse task performance than children praised for effort."

But there’s another byproduct: children praised for intelligence "described it as a fixed trait more than children praised for hard work, who believed it to be subject to improvement."

Why is that such a bad thing? Because telling kids they're smart when they get good grades encourages them to continue focusing on the grade rather than the learning process. They just want to keep being smart.

BEYOND SMARTS

In more recent years, research on how the brain learns is building on those studies. "How we learn shapes what we know and what we can do," writes author Annie Murphy Paul in a recent Time column. "Our knowledge and our abilities are largely determined not by our IQ or some other fixed measure of intelligence, but by the effectiveness of our learning process: call it our learning quotient."

The idea that anyone can learn, regardless of their inherent IQ — with emphasis on the process, the work, the effort — is at the heart of the work of Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton, associate professor of psychology at UC Berkeley.

Mendoza-Denton extends the idea that what's harmful about emphasis on achievement and intelligence can also be applied to emphasis on learning styles (audio, visual) or "multiple intelligences," a theory by Harvard professor Howard Gardner who distinguishes between different kinds of learners: spatial, linguistic, logical-mathematical, and so on.

Mendoza-Denton believes that emphasizing "native intelligences" reinforces the belief that kids are good at some things and, conversely, bad at others.

"It’s pervasive in our cultural narrative," Mendoza-Denton said at the recent Innovative Learning Conference. "'I'm not this kind of learner or that kind of learner. I'm good at words, but not math.'"

Taking that idea one step further, kids might think that if they have to work hard at something, that must mean they’re not smart. "It’s a theory about how the world works," he said.

Read the fulls story at: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/can-everyone-be-smart-at-everything/

Autism Offers Distinct Advantages, Researcher Says

From Disability Scoop: http://www.disabilityscoop.com/2011/11/04/autism-advantages/14377/

Rather than focus on autism as a series of deficits that need to be treated, one researcher argues that people with the disorder have advantages over those who are typically developing.

In a commentary published this week in the journal Nature, Laurent Mottron, a professor at the University of Montreal, argues that autism should be seen as a strength, even among those on the spectrum who are not savants.

"Recent data and my own personal experience suggest it’s time to start thinking of autism as an advantage in some spheres, not a cross to bear," says Mottron, who studies autism and employs several people with the disorder on his research team.

In his commentary, Mottron points to skills such as identifying patterns and memory recall that people with autism tend to excel at. Such skills can be a boon in the sciences and other career fields.

"Too often, employers don’t realize what autistics are capable of, and assign them repetitive, almost menial tasks," Mottron writes. "But I believe that most are willing and capable of making sophisticated contributions to society, if they have the right environment."

"In many instances, people with autism need opportunities and support more than they need treatment," he continues.

Even scientists studying autism have a tendency to emphasize the negative, Mottron says. Often discoveries of unique brain characteristics among people with autism are unfairly talked about as deficits rather than differences, he argues.

At the same time, Mottron says he's not naive to the challenges that are faced by many on the autism spectrum.

"As a clinician, I also know all too well that autism is a disability that can make daily activities difficult. One out of ten autistics cannot speak, nine out of ten have no regular job and four out of five autistic adults are still dependent on their parents. Most face the harsh consequences of living in a world that has not been constructed around their priorities and interests," Mottron wrote. "But in my experience, autism can also be an advantage."

Peter Bell, executive vice president at Autism Speaks, said that Mottron’s argument offers a "healthy perspective."

Read the full story at: http://www.disabilityscoop.com/2011/11/04/autism-advantages/14377/

November 07, 2011

With Bookshare, students with disabilities get quicker access to traditional texts

From Education Week: http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2011/11/02/10book_ep.h31.html?tkn=PVCCvrH2dVuvFLQHStFSjdd4XgBoTqCXhhCJ&cmp=clp-sb-edtech

When 4th grade teacher Heather Whitby sat down for a book discussion last week with a group of students at her Bethesda, Md., elementary school, other students read on their own, including two who a year ago might not have been able to do so.

Because of their disabilities, Kyle Nordheimer and Maurice Van Lowe struggle with traditional printed text. But, using Bookshare, a nonprofit that provides free electronic copies of books to students with certain disabilities, both boys watched computer screens scroll through the text of The Chocolate Touch, listening to it at the same time.

Inspired by Napster, the music-sharing service, Bookshare turns books into a format that can be read aloud by computers, magnified, and spaced differently so that students with vision problems or learning disabilities can read them. They're even available at the same time new releases reach bookstore shelves, unlike typical audiobooks.

Its services are an example of how e-book technology, taking off with consumers, has powerful potential for students who previously relied on more cumbersome and more difficult-to-obtain alternatives to the traditional book.

For schoolchildren, Bookshare is free, underwritten by a $32 million infusion from the U.S. Department of Education four years ago that’s led to 150,000 student Bookshare memberships across the nation.

Canadians with print disabilities may access over 22,000 titles at Bookshare, for a one-time $25USD fee plus an annual fee of $50USD.

Read the full story at: http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2011/11/02/10book_ep.h31.html?tkn=PVCCvrH2dVuvFLQHStFSjdd4XgBoTqCXhhCJ&cmp=clp-sb-edtech

Or visit Bookshare at: http://www.bookshare.org/ and find more information specific to Canadians at: http://www.bookshare.org/?c=en_CA

Students Contribute to Wikipedia Content and Credibility

From Mind/Shift: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/students-contribute-to-wikipedia-content-and-credibility/

Teachers who once shunned the idea of students citing Wikipedia on class assignments now are embracing the Web site as a teaching tool.

Dozens of teachers at high schools and universities – including several in California – are assigning their students to write and edit entries for the online encyclopedia. The projects are designed to help students improve their research and writing skills, while adding to the public knowledge.

Sheldon Gen, an associate professor at San Francisco State University, asked students to write Wikipedia entries for an environmental policy class. His graduate students chose topics ranging from Mendocino County's ban of genetically modified organisms to recent amendments to the Clean Air Act. Gen said some students initially were skeptical of Wikipedia and the assignment.

"The perception among a lot of people is that Wikipedia is not a particularly good source for newsworthy, policy-worthy information. My students shared that skepticism," Gen said. "But all of them said at the end that they really liked the project. One thing they truly appreciated is they published articles that are now part of the public dialogue."

Eric Goldman, an associate professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law, said he warned his students that the editing process for Wikipedia entries could be ruthless.

"The students felt a lot of stress that their entries would be edited into nonsense," Goldman said. "As it turned out, in the second course I taught, the students were almost disappointed that they got virtually no feedback at all."

The Wikimedia Foundation, which operates Wikipedia, has worked with 24 universities in an initiative to improve the U.S. public policy entries on the site. Professors at UC Berkeley, the University of San Francisco and USC also participated.

The Wikimedia Foundation recently announced that it is expanding the project to all topic areas and countries. Foundation spokesman Frank Schulenburg said teachers began assigning students Wikipedia entries in the early days of the site, and the foundation liked the idea and decided to support it. The foundation has not always been able to keep up with the demand for sufficient support and help in navigating Wikipedia's technical aspects.

Read the full story at: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/students-contribute-to-wikipedia-content-and-credibility/

The Pen That is Smarter Than the ... Pen

From THE Journal: http://thejournal.com/articles/2011/11/03/livescribe.aspx

ITS at the U of S has provided Disability Services for Students with SmartPens that are being loaned out to students with disabilities. Curious about what these pens can do? Read on:

A few years ago, science teacher Janice Crowley noticed a student in one of her classes who had failed the same course the previous year. She learned the student had failed because he had a full-time job and didn't have time to study during the week. By the time he got around to the course material on the weekend, he had forgotten the lesson.

Concerned that things might not be much different the second time around, Crowley told him she would create a downloadable "pencast" of each lesson, essentially an audio recording of the spoken lecture synced with the notes she wrote during class, to help him re-experience the lesson at his convenience.

The Livescribe smartpen, the tool that makes pencasting possible, is essentially a mini computer that records what the user hears or says while he or she takes notes on specially coded paper that syncs the written word with the audio file. Users can replay the lesson either by touching the smartpen directly to the paper—at any point in the notes the audio file will sync up. Teachers can also upload the synced pencast to a computer, where students can hear the audio and see the written notes in broadcast fashion. Although Livescribe is relatively new to the K-12 market, teachers and students are already using the technology in a number of ways to improve student performance and extend teacher instruction beyond the classroom.

By the time Crowley interceded on behalf of her struggling student, she was already a convert to smartpen technology, which she was using in her high school chemistry classes at Wichita Collegiate School, a private K-12 school in Wichita, KS. For these classes, Crowley creates pencasts of her lessons, then uploads them to Moodle, where her students can access them at home to review what they learned in class, or what they missed if they were absent from class. She's also slowly built up a library of her lessons, recorded during her planning period.

Because of their versatility, Livescribe smartpens are being used by teachers in every subject, but math and science teachers have found them particularly useful, due to the step-by-step nature of those subjects, according to Holly De Leon, vice president of sales for its Livescribe's K-12 division.

"A lot of math and science teachers are using it to be able to ensure students get all the parts (of a lesson)," she says. "If a student got parts one and two, and then was stumped on three and four, they can listen to just the portion they’re stumped on."

Crowley finds this especially true for her chemistry classes, where she uses pencasts particularly to explain difficult concepts. "When a teacher is teaching hard material, kids' brains shut down," she says. "I don’t want students not getting it and going home with only a blank piece of paper."

The smartpen not only fills in gaps for the student regarding course content; it can fill in the teacher too on what the student's doing.

For example, once Crowley posts a pencast, she can see if and when students access it to make sure they're studying. Last year, one of her students who had gotten A's before the Christmas break fell behind after the vacation, which is not uncommon, according to Crowley.

Read the full story at: http://thejournal.com/articles/2011/11/03/livescribe.aspx

November 04, 2011

Students Push Their Facebook Use Further Into Course Work

From The Chronicle of Higher Education: http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/students-push-their-facebook-use-further-into-academics/33947

College students are taking social media to a new level, using Web sites like Facebook to communicate with other students about their coursework, according to results of a new survey on student technology use.

Nine out of 10 college students say they use Facebook for social purposes, like writing status updates and posting pictures. And the majority, 58 percent, say they feel comfortable using it to connect with other students to discuss homework assignments and exams. One out of four students even went so far as to say they think Facebook is "valuable" or "extremely valuable" to their academic success.

The survey was conducted in June by the Educause Center for Applied Research, and was taken by 3,000 students from more than 1,000 colleges. The results show how technology is shaping students' lives both inside and outside the classroom.

Kevin Roberts, chief information officer of Abilene Christian University, says technology is merging the academic and social aspects of students' lives.

"Learning takes place beyond the 50 minutes you spend in class," Mr. Roberts said. "So using Facebook, while you're talking about the Rangers game, students just throw in, 'Oh, by the way, did you understand what Dr. So-and-So was talking about today?'"

Some students say they still want to keep their social and academic lives separate, as noted in an earlier Chronicle story. In the survey, 30 percent of students say they prefer to draw a line between these two worlds.

Students are taking to other social networks, too. More than 30 percent of students say they use sites such as Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn, and Google+. Nearly a quarter of students report using social studying sites, such as CourseHero and GradeGuru, and 11 percent say they wish instructors would incorporate these sites into the curriculum more often.

The idea of students wanting professors to integrate more technology use into the classroom was a common takeaway from the survey. After e-mail, learning-management systems and e-textbooks were the two technologies that students wanted instructors to use more frequently, according to the survey.

Learning-management systems are used by 73 percent of students, and e-books or e-textbooks by 57 percent.

Even though those technologies are commonplace on most campuses, some students say that their instructors don't use them effectively or that they themselves don't have the skills they need to use them effectively.

"Students are saying they want to see classes taught more like how they live their lives," Mr. Roberts said. "I don’t think they just want technology for technology’s sake."

Plagiarism Differences in High School and College Students

From Mind/Shift: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/11/plagiarism-tactics-differ-between-high-school-and-college-students/

A report released today by the plagiarism-detection tool TurnItIn confirms what a lot of teachers already know: that students are copying content from online sources. According to the report, for both high school and college students, Wikipedia and Yahoo Answers were the top two most popular sources of lifted copy.

But another interesting fact emerged from the report about the difference between high school and college students. While 31% of content matches for high school students came from social and "content-sharing" sites (like Facebook or Yahoo Answers), just 26% of the matches for college students originated there.

College students were more likely to use content from cheat sites and paper mills, the report finds: 19.6% of content matches in college students' papers came from those sites, whereas just 14.1% of matches to high school students' papers. College students were also more likely to turn to news sites — 16.6% versus 12.3% of college students. And even though Wikipedia was the most popular source for copied content, encyclopedias in general constituted roughly 11-12% of content for both populations.

The data from this report comes from TurnItIn's own business: some 128 million content matches from 33 million student papers (24 million from higher education and nine million from high school) over a one-year period. That is, when students' papers were submitted to TurnItIn, its system found passages from those papers matched content available on the open Web.

The report doesn't indicate whether or not students cited these sources (it's likely that many did). And TurnItIn doesn't always catch plagiarized material from behind paywalls — sites that require subscriptions, for example, like many academic journals may not be included in what TurnItIn indexes.

TurnItIn's report backs up a recent Pew Research Center survey, which showed that more than half of college presidents said that they believe plagiarism has increased among their students over the course of the last decade. None of this is surprising, of course. The "copy-and-paste" functionality and the massive amount of online material available makes it a lot easier to take whole sections of a Web site and plop it into one's assignment. As long as the source is cited, of course, it's not necessarily considered plagiarism.

To help combat plagiarism, TurnItIn makes a number of suggestions for educators: make your assignments plagiarism-proof, the company suggests. Help students better understand citations. And — of course — the company recommends schools use a service like TurnItIn.

Recently we looked at some of the factors that may be behind our "culture of academic dishonesty." Is it simply that students are taking advantage of easier copy-and-paste technology and online resources, or are there other issues at play? For example, what are the pressures on college students that make them far more likely to turn to cheating sites than high school students? What are the reasons why high schoolers turn more to social sites? How can we take advantage of their interest in working with their peers while helping them learn not to simply copy from them?

How can we address these factors, while creating better assignments — ones that reward creative thinking — and offering better instruction about citation?

What is Behind the Culture of Academic Dishonesty?

From Mind/Shift: http://mindshift.kqed.org/2011/10/whats-behind-the-culture-of-academic-dishonesty/

Academic dishonesty, plagiarism, and cheating are hardly new. And as the history of the banking industry and baseball demonstrate, cheating scandals aren't just limited to schools. With numerous incidents making headlines in recent months, however, questions are being raised about the validity and the pressures of standardized testing, as well as the security of testing practices. And some are asking if it's time to scrutinize the underlying behaviors and motivation for all this cheating.

Is the pressure to score high — not just on standardized tests, but in all facets of school life — leading to a rampant culture of academic dishonesty? Or is it simply that technology is making it easier to cheat?

Some studies indicate that cheating is at an all time high — or at least, students' willingness to admit they’ve cheated. Some 75% of college students admit that they've cheated at one point or another during their academic careers. That's up from 20% of students back in the 1940s.

According to these studies, the types of students who are cheating has changed, too. It isn't necessarily the student who's struggling to do well in class who's cheating; it's top-performing students who are feeling the pressure to perform better. A recent article in Psychology Today cites one student saying, "I was in honors classes in high school because I wanted to get into the best schools, and all of us in those classes cheated; we needed the grades to get into the best schools."

The pressures to test well are extending beyond students now too, as the cheating scandals in Atlanta and DC and elsewhere suggest. Students are cheating. Teachers are cheating. School administrators are cheating.

That Psychology Today article, written by Peter Gray, a research professor of psychology at Boston College, posits that there may be something about the structure of the school system that is becoming a "breeding ground for cheaters." He argues that by being forced to spend time doing work they do not choose, students are unmotivated to learn. Furthermore, in a climate where they're told what really matters are grades, students turn to cheating (rather than to learning) in order to do well.

"One of the tragedies of our system of schooling," he writes, "is that it deflects students from discovering what they truly love and find worth doing for its own sake. Instead, it teaches them that life is a series of hoops that one must get through, by one means or another, and that success lies in others' judgments rather than in real, self-satisfying accomplishments."

Despite all the new ways that students can learn now — via Web tools and mobile phone apps, for example — it seems as though without a shift in this culture, cheating will continue. Indeed, I stumbled upon a Web site yesterday with instructions on how to cheat the point system on Khan Academy. Rather than earn badges by watching (and hopefully learning from) the videos, the author of the post demonstrated how to artificially inflate one's points. Khan himself said he's heard from teachers that students try to "game" the system, and his engineers are working on finding ways to thwart those efforts.

Many people point to Khan Academy as a site that epitomizes a system that encourages self-paced, self-motivated learners to thrive. What does it say, then, that there are already cheating sites aimed at gaming that system?