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The Ray Graham Training Center
“I have kids light up all the time when they use EasyTech. The graphics and auditory reinforcement built into EasyTech makes it a wonderful tool. They’re constantly smiling.”— Gayle Ryan |
EasyTech supports Chicago center to build students’ technology skills, confidenceLearning technology skills opens possibilities for teens with wide range of physical and mental disabilities Challenge Many students had little or no exposure to computers, let alone a variety of technology skills. Her goal was to provide them with basic computer literacy that would help them in life once they graduated. Ryan’s students come to the center with a wide range of disabilities, including students with profound mental retardation, autism, and brain injury. Many have multiple handicaps, and nearly all are functioning at the kindergarten through second grade levels. While few can read, all can learn, Ryan emphasizes. Solution: Learning.com’s EasyTech While EasyTech was not specifically designed to teach cognitively delayed students, Ryan finds the program is perfectly suited for introducing her students to computers. They respond with overwhelming enthusiasm to EasyTech’s interactive lessons. The animated characters and step-by-step narration keep students focused and motivated. “I have kids light up all the time when they use EasyTech. The graphics and auditory reinforcement built into EasyTech makes it a wonderful tool. They’re constantly smiling,” Ryan says. Ryan is also seeing an increase in the numbers of Hispanic students she serves, and she’s able to meet their needs with the Spanish version of EasyTech, making a dramatic difference in the quality of instruction she can provide for this special population. Supporting Family Involvement “Besides reinforcing the lessons the students do at school, parents are also learning valuable technology skills,” Ryan says. “We send math and reading homework with the kids. With EasyTech, parents are able to do the lessons right beside the students.” Ryan also invites families to come to the school once each week and Ryan finds EasyTech an excellent way to engage the families and help them learn new technology skills with their children. Many families do not have computers at home, or have never worked on computers. For these parents, EasyTech is an excellent resource to get instruction in critical technology skills. Results “The certificates are so valuable. My students need that immediate reinforcement to show them their progress,” she adds. Most of her students do not receive traditional report cards with letter grades, so the certificates serve as excellent positive reinforcement for a job well done. Just as important as the pride and confidence EasyTech helps build are the life skills these students are gaining, Ryan says. Most of the students have had little or no exposure to computers in their earlier educational experiences. Often in special education classrooms in their younger years, they did not receive any computer time, she says. Through EasyTech, they are able to learn how to use a mouse and navigate through software. They learn to use a word processing program, print documents, browse the Internet to find information or even music they like. It opens their world, Ryan says. For those students who go on to employment, Ryan says it’s valuable for them to know basic skills that allow them to, for example, enter in their employee ID numbers, or print documents, on the job. One student working in the center’s office helps alphabetize records using a printout of the alphabet from his computer. He learned to do this through EasyTech. “It is a joy to have high school students on a kindergarten academic level enter my room and head straight for one of the computers,” Ryan says. “In all, EasyTech has been the most rewarding and productive experience for me in 30 years of teaching. It has given my students motivation and a new sense of self esteem.” Share: Reddit | Digg | del.icio.us | Google | Yahoo | What is this? |