1 / 45

Math Accommodations

This article provides tips and resources for math accommodations for students with disabilities such as deafness, upper limb impairments, learning disabilities, low vision, and blindness. It includes suggestions for instructors and software/books recommendations. Additionally, tips for verbalizing math, strategies for learning, and addressing math anxiety are discussed.

mnaranjo
Télécharger la présentation

Math Accommodations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Math Accommodations

  2. Issues • Accessing books/problem sets • Doing homework/tests • Getting information in class

  3. Tips for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students

  4. Suggestions for Instructors • Face the students • Do not talk facing the board • Repeat student questions • The deaf student may not have been looking at the questioner • Make sure you can be seen clearly • Do not stand and talk in front of a bright window • Use gestures • Pointing to what you’re talking about is helpful • Build in pauses • Deaf students do a lot of multi-tasking, allow some pauses

  5. Tips for Students with Upper Limb Impairments

  6. Software • Math equation programs allow keyboard entry • Scientific Notebook • MathType (plug-in for Word) • MathTalk allows voice entry • Requires MathTalk, Dragon NaturallySpeaking and Scientific Notebook (all three!)

  7. Books • Scan to PDF • Read on-screen • Foot pedal mouse • Use Dragon to advance pages onscreen • Remove spine and rebind to lay flat • Use hardware page-turning systems

  8. Tips for LD Students

  9. Verbalize • Instructor side • Concrete, specific descriptions • Verbalize equations and operations • Student side • Verbalize the process • Have students explain patterns they see

  10. Strategies • Spread one semester courses over two • Teach strategies, not just algorithms • Tactile graphs • Manipulatives • Color highlighting • Draw pictures

  11. Self-help • Work in quiet without clutter • Videotape students studying • Students may be totally unaware of what they are doing while studying—videotaping provides feedback

  12. Word Problems • Learn key words • “and,” “sum,” “increased” mean add • “take away,” “difference,” “less” mean subtract • “of,” “times” means multiply • “per,” “out of,” “ratio of,” “quotient” mean divide • Highlight what is important • Look for key words • List information • Draw pictures

  13. Auditory Math • Math books in MathML • Create in MathType or Scientific Notebook • MathPlayer reads and highlights • Free download from Design Science • http://www.dessci.com/ • Read&Write Gold, Dolphin Tutor, and WYNN work with MathPlayer • Kurzweil only works from the Web interface.

  14. Online for LD* • ModuMath Tutorials • Video tutorials for basic math and algebra • http://www.modumath.org/ • ALEKS • Assessment and learning • http://www.aleks.com/highered/math/ • Khan Academy (videos) • http://www.khanacademy.org/ * Please note: Although helpful, these programs not fully accessible—do not require them for all students.

  15. MuchoMath • Professor Larry Perez atSaddleback College • lperez@saddleback.edu • You Tube math videos • www.saddleback.edu/faculty/lperez/

  16. Learning Styles for Math • Christine Tunstall at Mt. SAC • Instructional Specialist in ABI • Resources to help students learn how to learn math • http://instruction.mtsac.edu/ctunstall/ • http://instruction.mtsac.edu/ctunstall/dsps_33/class_handouts.html

  17. Math Anxiety Article • Sian Beilock, Journal of Cognition and Development • Anxiety harmed the highest-achieving students, who typically have the most working memory • Worry disrupts working memory • Reframing anxiety improves performance • http://tiny.cc/jdjwkw

  18. Tips for Low Vision Students

  19. Software for Writing Math • Keyboard entry • Scientific Notebook • MathType • Equations can be enlarged • Voices what is written • Chatty Infty

  20. Creating Large Print • Start with PDF • Crop pages • Print to fit page (11 in. x 17 in.) • Can tile pages • Portion of page enlarged to full sheet

  21. Enlarging Math in Word • Math equations created withMathType plug-in • http://www.dessci.com/en/products/ • Create a “Preferences” file • Can save multiple preference files • Apply preferences • Enlarge text with Ctrl + Shift + >

  22. Tips for Blind Students

  23. Use Meaningful Words • Use concrete terms • Meaningless! • “Here is the equation.” • “We start with the equation and factor.” • “Set both factors equal to zero and solve to get the result.” • Avoid • This, that, here, there, thing

  24. In the following example, you would say everything! • Don’t just write it; verbalize it! Say each step. 6x 2 = 53x + 9 Subtract 53x and 9 from both sides 6x 2 – 53x – 9 = 0 Trinomial factoring gives us (6x + 1)(x – 9) = 0 Set both factors equal to zero 6x + 1 = 0 and x – 9 = 0 Solve each equation…etc.

  25. Be wary of assumptions • Blindness covers a range • Most blind folks have some sight • Many do see color • Not all blind people read Braille • In fact, many CC students do not • Not all students who read Braille read Nemeth math Braille

  26. Your Brain on Nemeth • Students who read Nemeth braille “think math” differently from sighted students • Difficult to transition for those who originally learned math sighted • Sighted reads learn math “spatially” • Nemeth is linear

  27. 1 = #1 2 = #2 3 = #3 4 = #4 5 = #5 6 = #6 7 = #7 8 = #8 9 = #9 0 = #0 Single-digit Numbers

  28. Various Symbols • 1,000 = #1,000 • 98.6 = #98.6 • x = 4 = x .k #4 • Sigma ∑ = .,s • (1) = (#1) • ¼ = #1_/4

  29. Spatial Language • Over? • 1½ • #1_?1_/4_# • ½/¾ • ,??1_/2#,_/?3_/4#,#

  30. More Spatial Language • Raised? • x² + 2x + 2 = 10 • x^2"+2x+2 .k #10

  31. Braille options • Brailling math is expensive and time-consuming • Algebra books can cost $25,000+ • Calculus books can cost $100,000+ • Check books already in Braille and see if instructor is willing to use the problem sets • Work with an instructor on “independent study” with a book already in Braille

  32. Lots of Math in Braille! • Alternate Text Production Center (ATPC) • www.atpc.net • ATPC produces Braille and tactile graphics free for the CCCs • Sells books to those outside CCC system • Must have syllabus to begin project • They braille only required chapters • The more advance notice, the better • Syllabus can be from previous term!

  33. Other Nemeth Resources • American Printing House for the Blind hosts the Louis Database • Anyone can search for Braille materials • www.aph.org • Hadley School for the Blind • Free courses • www.hadley-school.org/Web_Site/2_b_ae_and_hs_program.asp

  34. Nemeth on Campus • Scientific Notebook documents can be translated into Nemeth math Braille • www.mackichan.com • From other equation editors, save as LaTeX • Take into Scientific Notebook and save • Open with Duxbury Braille Translation Software (www.duxsys.com)

  35. What about graphing?? • Corkboard and string • PIAF graphs

  36. Tactile Diagrams • PIAF paper • “Pictures in a Flash” (www.optelec.com) • Microcapsule paper • Can start from any computer file

  37. Graphics Printer • Tiger Embosser • Embosses graphics in raised dots (www.viewplus.com) • Creates Dots Plus math Braille

  38. Other Tactile Strategies • Be creative! • Magnet boards • Letters and numbers can be purchased • Symbols can be cut from magnetic sheets • Corkboard for graphics • Glue thread to make a grid • Push-pins and string for graphing

  39. Be Creative! • Manipulatives • Many standard K-12 manipulatives will work • Collage • Puff paint • Cut-outs • Real objects

  40. Commercially Available • Wikki Stix • www.wikkistix.com • Sewell Raised Line Drawing Kit • www.maxiaids.com • Non-slip abacus (Cranmer Abacus) , Braille ruler, protractor, compass, Cubarithm • www.aph.org • MathWindow • www.mathwindow.com

  41. Scientific Calculator • Orion TI-36X • Hand-held, talks • American Printing House for the Blindwww.aph.org • MaxiAidswww.maxiaids.com

  42. Other Calculators • www.maxiaids.com • Search on “calculator”

  43. Software Calculator • Audio Graphing Calculator • Computer software, talks • ViewPlus Technology www.viewplus.com • Note: Graphs can be printed on Tiger Embosser or to PIAF paper

  44. MathTrax • Free from NASA • http://learn.arc.nasa.gov/mathtrax/index.html

  45. Useful Sites • http://www.inftyreader.org/?p=92 • http://accessiblemath.dessci.com/ • http://www.calstate.edu/accessibility/tutorials/math.shtml

More Related