Blog Posts from Bloglines
September 2, 2005
Special Education Internet Resources
The National Information Clearinghouse on Children Who Are Deaf-Blind
http://www.dblink.org/
The National Information Clearinghouse on Children who are Deafblind (DB-LINK) provides access to an extensive collection of resources related to deaf-blindness. The website is constantly updated and it is very user friendly. For individuals who do not have internet access, you can reach the librarians by phone at 800.438.9376. DB-LINK also hosts a variety of listserve related to deaf-blindness. This is a must have resource in the field of deaf-blindness.
The National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities (NICHCY)
http://www.nichcy.org
Much like DB-Link, NICHCY houses an extensive collection of up-to-date information related to children with disabilities and special education. Also user friendly, NICHY is a valuable resource for anyone desiring information on a variety of topics affecting children with disabilities.
Zoomerang
http://info.zoomerang.com/
For those of you who create questionnaires….this is a site for you. Zoomerang allows you to create, customize and send online surveys easily and efficiently. You can select from a variety of templates and question formats. Zoomerang eliminates the messy snail mail paper trail.
* Posted on: Fri, Sep 2 2005 12:48 PM
***************************************************************
Review of Educational Websites
Ecucational resources cited by Loana Mason on her blog: Epiphanies
#1 TSBVI (Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired) http://www.tsbvi.edu/
I am very familiar with TSBVI’s website. Loana’s summation of the website was well written. If reviewers have the time to wade through a treasure chest of information related to blindness, vision impairment, and deaf-blindness, this in an extremely valuable resource. Reviewers can also find resources from the Texas Deaf-blind Outreach Staff who are known for their innovative ideas around services for children who are deaf-blind. Great resource Loana. Thanks for sharing!
#2. SEELS (Special Education Elementary Longitudinal Study) http://www.seels.net/grindex.html
I had seen this website before, but I have never had time to explore its contents. I liked that Loana mentioned accessibility issues within her review. I think accessibility is an important component to consider when writing a review of a website. Of course it helps when you know what you are talking about ;). I also appreciated Loana’s hint on how to effectivey use the information provided by the site.
#3. CAST (Center for Applied Special Technology) http://www.cast.org/index.html
For me, this is a new web-resource. This site offers a multitude of information. Loana’s review was helpful as she offered reviewers guidance towards an area that may be of particular interest, NIMAS (National Instructional Materials Accessibility Standard. Loana’s review not offered guidance to important features of the website, she also offered an explanation of NIMAS upfront, that might even further catch the readers attention.
It seems that the more detailed website reviews are, including accessibility and key or valuable features, the more likely reviewers are going to explore the website beyond the homepage. Luona did a nice job of all of these things. Thanks for letting me pick on you Loana
* Posted on: Fri, Sep 2 2005 12:46 PM
***************************************************************
August 30, 2005
What Other People Should Know about Distance Education
I believe any distance education strategy should be consistantly evaluated for effectiveness. Distance education is a good fit for some activities, yet I believe people select distance education strategies purely for the point of using it (not because it is the optimum educational strategy). I have seen projects who have written distance education in their grant, and then use it, just to say they have whether it matched their purpose or not. I think as educators, we must not forget the value of human contact. Especially with parents of children with disabilities who may already be isolated.
Therefore, I believe everyone needs to know when to use and when not to use distance education. I also believe evaluation should go hand-in-hand with any distance education course.
* Posted on: Tue, Aug 30 2005 3:42 PM
****************************************************************
Defining Distance Education
For the past six years, I worked for a national technical assistance project assessing needs and implementing strategies to improve services for children who are deaf-blind and their families.
The project had four offices and served 48 state and multi-state projects.
During my time with the project, distance education meant access. Access to people and information regardless of time or geographical barriers.
Since enrolling in Nathan’s class, I define distance education in a whole new way (which I will not mention here
Sorry Nathan, I think I have made it my personal goal to give you a bit of a hard time (smile).
A few upsides of distance education are its relative convience, the equality it offers participants, and the flexibilty it offers in terms of using a variety of mediums to convey or obtain information.
A downside to distance education is that it removes us from human contact.
* Posted on: Tue, Aug 30 2005 2:21 PM
****************************************************************
August 26, 2005
If your blogging and you know clap your hands! Blog entry 1 of hundreds if Nathan has his way!
* Posted on: Fri, Aug 26 2005 2:03 PM