ABSTRACT

First published in 1985. Information technology can offer huge benefits to the disabled. It can help many disabled people to overcome barriers of time and space and to a much greater extent it can help them to overcome barriers of communication. In that way new information technology offers opportunities to neutralise the worst effects of many kinds of disablement.

This book reviews the possibilities of using information technology in the education of the disabled. Commencing with an assessment of the learning problems faced by disabled people, it goes on to look at the scope of information technology and how it has been used for the education of students of all ages, particularly in the United Kingdom and the United States. A penultimate section considers most of the contentious issues that faced users of technology, whilst the conclusion devotes itself to the immediate and longer-term future, suggesting possible future trends and the consequent problems that may arise.

part 1|1 pages

Learning Problems of Disabled People

part 2|1 pages

New Information Technology for Learning

chapter 6|12 pages

What is New Information Technology?

chapter 7|13 pages

What Can New Information Technology Do?

chapter 8|23 pages

Devices and Systems

part 3|1 pages

Experience in Using the Technology

chapter 11|16 pages

Experience Among Deaf People

chapter 12|11 pages

Experience Among Speech-Impaired People

part 4|1 pages

Issues

chapter 13|14 pages

Educational Issues

chapter 14|7 pages

Social Issues

chapter 15|8 pages

Political Issues

chapter 16|7 pages

Economic Issues

chapter 17|8 pages

Technical Issues

part 5|1 pages

The Future

chapter 18|18 pages

The Next Five Years

chapter 19|9 pages

To AD 2000