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[Translation from English to Japanese ] 4 Ways iPads Are Changing the Lives of People With Disabilities Noah Rahma...
Original Texts
4 Ways iPads Are Changing the Lives of People With Disabilities
Noah Rahman has moderate Cerebral Palsy affecting his communication, cognition and upper and lower body movement. When he turned two, his language, cognitive abilitity and fine motor skills were diagnosed by a developmental specialist as being at least 12 months behind. Then Noah got an iPad.
Four months later, his language and cognition were on par with his age level. His fine motor skills had made significant leaps. Today, the three-year-old (pictured at right with his father) spends an hour or two on his iPad each day. He switches his apps between reading and writing in English, Arabic and Spanish. In the fall, he’ll enter a classroom of five-year-olds. “The iPad unlocked his motivation and his desire because it’s fun,” says his dad Sami Rahman, co-founder of SNApps4Kids, a community of parents, therapists and educators sharing their experiences using the iPad, iPod touch, iPhone and Android to help children with special needs. SNApps4Kids taps into a burgeoning trend for people with disabilities. Touch devices — most notably the iPad — are revolutionizing the lives of children, adults and seniors with special needs. Rahman estimates some 40,000 apps have been developed for this demographic.
“Touch has made it exceptionally accessible — everyone has an iPad, everyone has an iPod,” says Michelle Diament, cofounder of Disability Scoop, a source for news relating to developmental disabilities. “If you’re someone with a disability, having something that other people are using makes you feel like part of the in-crowd.” For people lacking motor skills, touch screens are more intuitive devices. There is no mouse, keyboard or pen intercepting their communication with the screen. Larger platforms, like iPads, are preferred over smaller iOS and Android devices for ease-of-use and, of course, the cool factor.
Here are four ways that touch devices are changing the lives of people with disabilities:
1. As a Communicator
Before the iPad and other similar devices, using touch-to-speak technology was incredibly expensive, costing around $8,000. Now, it only costs $499 for an iPad and $189.99 for a thorough touch-to-speak app like Proloquo2Go. That relative affordability has made the technology more available for children and adults that can’t use their voice. With the simple touch of an iPad, a hungry non-verbal person can communicate exactly what he or she would like to eat. Those apps can then be customized with photos or features to suit an individual’s life and needs.
Another option is Assistive Chat, which predicts several sentence completion options. For the most severely disabled people, Yes|No is a simple app that allows individuals to voice their preference in yes-or-no responses. “It gives dignity back to people who are more disabled,” says Vicki Windham, a special education teacher in the Clarkstown Central School District who trains people of all ages to make the most of their iPads. Windham reviews apps for people with a variety of special needs.
For hard-of-hearing iPad users, soundAmp R amplifies sound in a variety of situations. Users can also record lectures or presentations they want to listen to again later.
2. As a Therapeutic Device
SNApps4Kids co-founder Cristen Reat’s son Vincent was born with Down syndrome, which can also lead to low-muscle mass. While he can walk, Reat describes his son as a Buddha that prefers to sit still most of the time. Throughout his life, Vincent’s therapists and parents have tried to help him be more active. It was not until his physical therapist placed an iPad on a treadmill that Vincent was motivated to walk. He now stays on for nine and a half minutes, interacting with his iPad while he’s in motion.
In addition to increasing his gross motor ability to walk, Vincent’s iPad has helped his fine motor skills. For Vincent, computers and older technology required visual shifting — between a mouse or keyboard and the screen. On an iPad, Vincent can watch as one of his fingers writes directly on the screen to make selections. Similarly, Noah Rahman has shown motor improvement. After playing the Elmo Loves ABCs app on his iPad, he can write the entire alphabet, requiring sophisticated finger isolation. As a three-year-old, this puts him well above his grade level. “First it was ‘do it for me,’ then it was ‘do it with me,’ now he does it by himself,” says Noah’s father.
3. As an Educational Tool
Years ago, one of Jeremy Brown’s autistic elementary school students picked up his iPhone off his desk and began navigating the iOS with ease. “It’s like a fish to water,” says Brown, a teacher for autistic elementary school students, of his students’ interactions with touch technology. Brown is immersed in online discussions of technology and special education, moderating the Facebook group iTeach Special Education, collaborating on the podcast EdCeptional and coauthoring the blog Teaching All Students. While use of the iPad in classrooms is not yet approved in his school district, he believes the iPad is a great supplemental method of instruction, estimating 80% to 90% of his students with autism see great results when using iOS devices. Brown hopes his school district and others across the country will approve iPads in the classroom. While no one advocates replacing traditional instruction, a number of apps do address academic subjects from math to language to reading and writing. In October 2010, Apple even featured an “Apps for Special Education” section in the App Store.
Brown encourages parents to separate their children’s recreational uses of the iPad from those in the classroom. Some students may watch YouTube videos on the school bus but while they’re at school they know Mr. Brown’s iPads are only for education.
Noah Rahman has moderate Cerebral Palsy affecting his communication, cognition and upper and lower body movement. When he turned two, his language, cognitive abilitity and fine motor skills were diagnosed by a developmental specialist as being at least 12 months behind. Then Noah got an iPad.
Four months later, his language and cognition were on par with his age level. His fine motor skills had made significant leaps. Today, the three-year-old (pictured at right with his father) spends an hour or two on his iPad each day. He switches his apps between reading and writing in English, Arabic and Spanish. In the fall, he’ll enter a classroom of five-year-olds. “The iPad unlocked his motivation and his desire because it’s fun,” says his dad Sami Rahman, co-founder of SNApps4Kids, a community of parents, therapists and educators sharing their experiences using the iPad, iPod touch, iPhone and Android to help children with special needs. SNApps4Kids taps into a burgeoning trend for people with disabilities. Touch devices — most notably the iPad — are revolutionizing the lives of children, adults and seniors with special needs. Rahman estimates some 40,000 apps have been developed for this demographic.
“Touch has made it exceptionally accessible — everyone has an iPad, everyone has an iPod,” says Michelle Diament, cofounder of Disability Scoop, a source for news relating to developmental disabilities. “If you’re someone with a disability, having something that other people are using makes you feel like part of the in-crowd.” For people lacking motor skills, touch screens are more intuitive devices. There is no mouse, keyboard or pen intercepting their communication with the screen. Larger platforms, like iPads, are preferred over smaller iOS and Android devices for ease-of-use and, of course, the cool factor.
Here are four ways that touch devices are changing the lives of people with disabilities:
1. As a Communicator
Before the iPad and other similar devices, using touch-to-speak technology was incredibly expensive, costing around $8,000. Now, it only costs $499 for an iPad and $189.99 for a thorough touch-to-speak app like Proloquo2Go. That relative affordability has made the technology more available for children and adults that can’t use their voice. With the simple touch of an iPad, a hungry non-verbal person can communicate exactly what he or she would like to eat. Those apps can then be customized with photos or features to suit an individual’s life and needs.
Another option is Assistive Chat, which predicts several sentence completion options. For the most severely disabled people, Yes|No is a simple app that allows individuals to voice their preference in yes-or-no responses. “It gives dignity back to people who are more disabled,” says Vicki Windham, a special education teacher in the Clarkstown Central School District who trains people of all ages to make the most of their iPads. Windham reviews apps for people with a variety of special needs.
For hard-of-hearing iPad users, soundAmp R amplifies sound in a variety of situations. Users can also record lectures or presentations they want to listen to again later.
2. As a Therapeutic Device
SNApps4Kids co-founder Cristen Reat’s son Vincent was born with Down syndrome, which can also lead to low-muscle mass. While he can walk, Reat describes his son as a Buddha that prefers to sit still most of the time. Throughout his life, Vincent’s therapists and parents have tried to help him be more active. It was not until his physical therapist placed an iPad on a treadmill that Vincent was motivated to walk. He now stays on for nine and a half minutes, interacting with his iPad while he’s in motion.
In addition to increasing his gross motor ability to walk, Vincent’s iPad has helped his fine motor skills. For Vincent, computers and older technology required visual shifting — between a mouse or keyboard and the screen. On an iPad, Vincent can watch as one of his fingers writes directly on the screen to make selections. Similarly, Noah Rahman has shown motor improvement. After playing the Elmo Loves ABCs app on his iPad, he can write the entire alphabet, requiring sophisticated finger isolation. As a three-year-old, this puts him well above his grade level. “First it was ‘do it for me,’ then it was ‘do it with me,’ now he does it by himself,” says Noah’s father.
3. As an Educational Tool
Years ago, one of Jeremy Brown’s autistic elementary school students picked up his iPhone off his desk and began navigating the iOS with ease. “It’s like a fish to water,” says Brown, a teacher for autistic elementary school students, of his students’ interactions with touch technology. Brown is immersed in online discussions of technology and special education, moderating the Facebook group iTeach Special Education, collaborating on the podcast EdCeptional and coauthoring the blog Teaching All Students. While use of the iPad in classrooms is not yet approved in his school district, he believes the iPad is a great supplemental method of instruction, estimating 80% to 90% of his students with autism see great results when using iOS devices. Brown hopes his school district and others across the country will approve iPads in the classroom. While no one advocates replacing traditional instruction, a number of apps do address academic subjects from math to language to reading and writing. In October 2010, Apple even featured an “Apps for Special Education” section in the App Store.
Brown encourages parents to separate their children’s recreational uses of the iPad from those in the classroom. Some students may watch YouTube videos on the school bus but while they’re at school they know Mr. Brown’s iPads are only for education.
Translated by
k_co
iPadが4つの方法で障害者の生活を変えている
Noah Rahmanは中等度の脳性麻痺があり、意志疎通、認知、上半身・下半身の身体運動に障害があります。2歳のときに彼の言語、認知能力と細かい運動能力は発達の専門家によって12ヶ月の遅れがあることが診断された。そしてNoahはiPadを手に入れた。
4ヶ月後、彼の言語と認知は彼の年齢並の水準となった。彼の細かい運動能力は大幅な飛躍をみた。
Noah Rahmanは中等度の脳性麻痺があり、意志疎通、認知、上半身・下半身の身体運動に障害があります。2歳のときに彼の言語、認知能力と細かい運動能力は発達の専門家によって12ヶ月の遅れがあることが診断された。そしてNoahはiPadを手に入れた。
4ヶ月後、彼の言語と認知は彼の年齢並の水準となった。彼の細かい運動能力は大幅な飛躍をみた。
本日、3歳(彼の父親の右)になった彼は毎日iPadを1~2時間使って時間を費やしていた。彼は彼のアプリを英語、アラビア語、スペイン語と切り替えて読み書きしていた。その歳の秋には、彼は5歳時のクラスに入った。「iPadによって彼のモチベーションと願望が開花したのだ。おもしろいからね。」彼の父であるSami Rahmanはそういう。彼はSNApps4Kidsの共同設立者であり、SNApps4Kidsとは親、治療者、教育者がiPad・iPod touch・iPhone・Androidを使って特別な用途での子どもを支援についての経験を共有する体だ。
SNApps4Kidsは障害者にとって急成長傾向にタップしている。タッチデバイス-最も有名なiPad-は特別な支援が必要な子ども、大人、高齢者の生活を革命的に変化させる。Rahmanは約40000個のアプリがこの人口学対象に開発されたとみつもっている。
「タッチすることで例外的にアクセス可能になった-誰しもがiPadを持ち、誰もがiPodを持つんです」とMichelle Diament:Disability Scoopの共同創設者はいう。Disability Scoopは発達障害についてのニュースソースだ。「もしあなたに障害があるなら、他の人が使っているものを持つことであたかも”排他的集団”の一員であるかのように思えるわけです。」
「タッチすることで例外的にアクセス可能になった-誰しもがiPadを持ち、誰もがiPodを持つんです」とMichelle Diament:Disability Scoopの共同創設者はいう。Disability Scoopは発達障害についてのニュースソースだ。「もしあなたに障害があるなら、他の人が使っているものを持つことであたかも”排他的集団”の一員であるかのように思えるわけです。」
運動能力のない人にとっては、タッチスクリーンはより直感的なデバイスだ。マウス・キーボード・ペンといった、画面とコミュニケーションするのをじゃまするものがない。iPadといった、大きなプラットフォームの方が小さいiOSやAndroidといったデバイスよりも使いやすく、また当然、かっこいいから好まれる。
ここではタッチデバイスが障害者の生活をかえた4つの方法について述べよう:
1.コミュニケーションツールとしての利用
iPadやその他類似のデバイスの前は、タッチ・トゥ・スピークテクノロジーを使うのは信じられないくらい費用がかかり、約8000ドルかかった。現在はiPadで499ドルとProloquo2Goのようなタッチ・トゥ・スピークアプリで189.99ドルかかるだけだ。
ここではタッチデバイスが障害者の生活をかえた4つの方法について述べよう:
1.コミュニケーションツールとしての利用
iPadやその他類似のデバイスの前は、タッチ・トゥ・スピークテクノロジーを使うのは信じられないくらい費用がかかり、約8000ドルかかった。現在はiPadで499ドルとProloquo2Goのようなタッチ・トゥ・スピークアプリで189.99ドルかかるだけだ。
そういった相対的な低価格によって、そういった技術が声を使うことのできない子どもにも大人にも、より多く利用可能になった。iPadを単純にタッチするだけで、言語を使わない人がお腹が空いていれば、何が食べたいのか正確に伝えることができる。これらのアプリは個人の生活やニーズに適合するよう写真や特徴をカスタマイズすることができるわけだ。
もうひとつ別のオプションとしては、Assistive Chatがある。Assistive Chatはいくつかの文章完成オプションを予測するものだ。最も重度の障害のある人々にとっては、Yes|Noというアプリがある。Yes|Noはシンプルなアプリで、はい・いいえの返事について障害者の好みを声にすることができるものだ。
もうひとつ別のオプションとしては、Assistive Chatがある。Assistive Chatはいくつかの文章完成オプションを予測するものだ。最も重度の障害のある人々にとっては、Yes|Noというアプリがある。Yes|Noはシンプルなアプリで、はい・いいえの返事について障害者の好みを声にすることができるものだ。
「それによって、障害のある人々に尊厳が復帰するのです。」とVicki Windhamはいう。彼はClarkstown Central Schoolの特殊学級の教師で、iPadを使って全年齢の障害時の訓練を行っている。Windhamは様々な特殊ニーズのある人用のアプリのレビューを行っている。
聴覚障害のiPadユーザーにとっては、soundAmp R を使うと様々な状況の音を増幅することができる。ユーザーは講義やプレゼンテーションのうち、あとでもう一度聞きたいものを録音することもできる。
2.治療デバイスとしての利用
SNApps4Kids共同創設者であるCristen Reatの息子、Vincentはダウン症をもって生まれてきた。ダウン症によってもまた筋力低下を引き起こしうる。彼は歩くことはできるが、Reatは彼の息子のことをブッダだという。というのも彼はほとんどの時間、じっと座ってすごしているからだ。
聴覚障害のiPadユーザーにとっては、soundAmp R を使うと様々な状況の音を増幅することができる。ユーザーは講義やプレゼンテーションのうち、あとでもう一度聞きたいものを録音することもできる。
2.治療デバイスとしての利用
SNApps4Kids共同創設者であるCristen Reatの息子、Vincentはダウン症をもって生まれてきた。ダウン症によってもまた筋力低下を引き起こしうる。彼は歩くことはできるが、Reatは彼の息子のことをブッダだという。というのも彼はほとんどの時間、じっと座ってすごしているからだ。
彼の生涯を通して、Vincentのセラピストと両親は彼がもっと活発になるような手助けをしようとしてきた。彼のフィジカルセラピストがトレッドミルにiPadを設置したらはじめて、Vincentは歩く意欲がわいてきたという。彼は現在9時間30秒そのままの姿勢でいて、運動中もiPadを操作している。
彼の歩くといった粗大運動を高めることに加えて、VincentはiPadによって微細な運動能力も高まった。Vincentにとっては、コンピュータや古いテクノロジーでは視覚的な移動が必要となる-すなわちマウス・キーボードと画面の間の移動だ。iPadでは、Vincentは指1本で書いて直接スクリーンから選びながら、見ることができるわけだ。
彼の歩くといった粗大運動を高めることに加えて、VincentはiPadによって微細な運動能力も高まった。Vincentにとっては、コンピュータや古いテクノロジーでは視覚的な移動が必要となる-すなわちマウス・キーボードと画面の間の移動だ。iPadでは、Vincentは指1本で書いて直接スクリーンから選びながら、見ることができるわけだ。
同様に、Noah Rahmanも運動機能の改善を示している。Elmo Loves ABCsアプリをiPadで遊んだあと、彼はアルファベットという複雑な指単独の動きを要求するものが全部書けるようになった。3歳児として、このことで彼は彼の学年レベルを上回ったといえる。「最初は『私のためにこれやって』からはじまり、次に『私とこれをやって』になって、現在は彼はひとりでそれをやるようになったのです。」とNoahの父はいう。
3.教育ツールとしての利用
何年も前になるが、jeremy Brown自閉症小学校の生徒がiPhoneを机から出して、簡単にiOSをナビゲートしはじめたという。「水を得た魚のようだった」とBrownはいう。Brownは自閉症児向けの小学校の教師であり、彼の生徒にタッチテクノロジーを用いている。
3.教育ツールとしての利用
何年も前になるが、jeremy Brown自閉症小学校の生徒がiPhoneを机から出して、簡単にiOSをナビゲートしはじめたという。「水を得た魚のようだった」とBrownはいう。Brownは自閉症児向けの小学校の教師であり、彼の生徒にタッチテクノロジーを用いている。
Brownはテクノロジーと特殊教育についてのオンラインディスカッションに没頭しており、FacebookのグループであるiTeach Special Educationの議論を管理したり、EdCeptionalというポッドキャストのコラボレーションをしたり、Teaching All Studentsというブログの共著を行ったりしている。iPadを教室で使うことはまだ彼の学校の規則では許可されていないのだが、彼はiPadがインストラクションにおける効果的な補助的手段であると信じており、80~90%の彼の自閉症の生徒がiOSデバイスを使うことですばらしい結果を残していると評価している。Brownは彼の学校の規則や他の国内の学校がiPadを教室で使うことを認めるようになることを望んでいる。
誰も伝統的なインストラクションをかえることを支持する人はいないが、多くのアプリが数学から言語の読み書きといったアカデミックな事項に本当に関わるようになっている。2010年8月、Appleは“Apps for Special Education”(特殊学級向けアプリ)セクションをApp Storeで特集したくらいだ。
Brownは親に教室でのiPadの利用と娯楽目的でiPadを使うことを分けるよう勧めている。スクールバスでYouTubeを見る生徒もいるかもしれないが、学校にいるときはBrown先生のiPadが教育目的専用であることがわかっている。
Brownは親に教室でのiPadの利用と娯楽目的でiPadを使うことを分けるよう勧めている。スクールバスでYouTubeを見る生徒もいるかもしれないが、学校にいるときはBrown先生のiPadが教育目的専用であることがわかっている。
Result of Translation in Conyac
- Number of Characters of Requests:
- 5793letters
- Translation Language
- English → Japanese
- Translation Fee
- $130.35
- Translation Time
- about 12 hours
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k_co
Starter
特に生物学、医療関係に専門知識があります。