ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY
WHAT IS ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY?
Assistive
Technology is equipment and software designed to address
the special needs of persons with disabilities such as hearing,
visual, learning, mobility, etc. in order to assist them
in the learning processes of higher education and/or career
management. Northern Virginia Community College is dedicated
to providing equal opportunity to all persons in pursuing
higher education, with assistive technology being one the
avenues that can be used to assist those students for which
there is a need.
WHAT KIND OF ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY IS AVAILABLE
AT NVCC?
The
following is a list of equipment and software currently in
use at all campuses with the exceptions noted. Click on the
logos for further information from the company.
ALPHASMART
3000 - A simple, portable computer that
is compatible with Macintosh or PC and most printers.
Users can type, edit and electronically store text
and practice keyboarding without being at a computer.
The text can be transferred to any computer for formatting
or printed directly to a printer.
BIG
KEYS PLUS - An alternative keyboard that has large, one-inch,
easily readable, square keys (4x bigger than keys on standard keyboards).
Includes a switch that can easily convert the keyboard from the standard "QWERTY" layout
to an easy-to-use ABC layout.
BLAZER -
A small, quiet, and lightweight Braille embosser that also doubles
as a speech synthesizer. (Alexandria/Annandale)
COMFORT
KEYBOARD - A true ergonomic keyboard designed with sections
that separate and are totally adjustable into an infinite number
of positions to meet the unique needs of each individual.
DRAGON
NATURALLY SPEAKING - A flexible, discrete speech recognition
system that allows you to speak to your computer naturally and at
a normal pace to create, edit, format, and move text in virtually
any Windows application. It allows you to operate your PC totally
hands-free with voice commands and mouse control.
DUXBURY
BRAILLE - A translation software program that allows anyone
who may or may not be Braille literate to translate text to Braille.
The program displays the Braille translation prior for review and
allows the user to select a line of Braille and see the text. After
review, the Braille file can be saved and printed with a normal page
printer or embossed on a Braille printer. A normal page printer will
not produced raised dots, but will produce raised dot like images
which are useful for sighted individuals to review the Braille output.
(Alexandria/Annandale)
DVORAK
KEYBOARD - An ergonomic alternative to the keyboard layout
commonly found on typewriters and computers known as "Qwerty",
originally designed in the 1870s to accommodate the slow mechanical
movement of early typewriters. The Dvorak has the most used consonants
on the right side of the home row, and the vowels on the left side
of the home row. It is designed to facilitate keying in a back-and-forth
motion; (right hand, then left hand, then right, etc. (Loudoun)
FM
LISTENING DEVICE - Provides amplification to give wireless
hearing improvement for mild hearing losses in the 10 to 40 db range.
Requires a presenter (instructor) to wear a transmitter with a small
microphone.
FOUR
TRACK PLAYER/RECORDER - Allows recording and playback of
books on four tracks in order to maximize the amount of tape space
used when producing a cassette; providing up to four hours of material
on each tape. CDrom players are now available for new books that
are being processed in CDrom format.
FRANKLIN
SPEAKING DICTIONARY & THESAURUS - A speaking electronic
dictionary and thesaurus with an 8-line display. View definitions,
synonyms, antonyms, and related words and hear them pronounced.
HEADMOUSE -
A device that translates the movements of a user's head into directly
proportional movements of the computer mouse pointer. It replaces
the standard desktop computer mouse for people who cannot use their
hands. (Alexandria/Annandale)
INSPIRATION® -
A visual learning software tool used to develop ideas and organize
thinking. Inspiration is used for a wide variety of visual learning
activities including concept mapping, webbing, and the use of graphical
organizers; planning and organizing student projects and administrative
tasks; brainstorming; and pre-writing.
JAWS -
A versatile and powerful screen reader that enables blind or visually-impaired
Windows based operating system users to extensively navigate the
Internet, work in MS Office Suite, Corel office programs, presentation
software, and most popular computer applications. Includes multi-lingual
voice synthesizer training tapes.
KENSINGTON
EXPERT TRACKBALL MOUSE - A symmetrically, 4 extra-large
button mouse designed to fit the shape of any hand for easier control
and movement of the cursor.
KURZWEIL
3000 SCAN AND READ - An innovative PC-based reading system
that helps people with learning and reading difficulties improve
reading speed and comprehension.
CLOSED
CAPTION (CCTV) - Provides magnification of text in both
color and black and white. (Alexandria, Loudoun, Woodbridge)
OPEN
BOOK - If you are blind or have low vision, Open Book can
help you read any printed document. It turns a computer with a sound
card and a scanner into a complete reading machine. The printed text
is placed on the scanner that takes a picture of the page. The Open
Book software then translates that picture back into words and reads
those words aloud.
ORION
TI-34 TALKING SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR - A powerful, lightweight,
pocket size calculator based on the popular TI-34 from Texas Instruments,
with over 95 scientific functions including statistics and trigonometry.
SOFTYPE -
A software utility which replaces the functionality of a standard
keyboard with a full featured on-screen keyboard which can be accessed
using a mouse or mouse emulator such as the HeadMouse. (Alexandria/Annandale)
SPACE
SAVER KEYBOARD - A desk model space saver keyboard that
is 60% the size of standard 101-key keyboards. (Alexandria/Annandale)
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
DEVICE FOR THE DEAF (TDD) - Has direct
telephone line connection that lets the hearing impaired dial and
answer calls from the keyboard. NVCC has several stand alone units
at each campus and one installed per campus to be used with a payphone.
ZOOMTEXT
XTRA!- An adaptive software for people of low vision that
seamlessly integrates magnification, screen reading, and scanning
with OCR. It includes DocReader, a full-screen environment for reading
text from any Windows application or scanned document.
HOW CAN YOU OBTAIN THESE SERVICES?
1).
You must be a registered student at NVCC and
2).
You must identify yourself as having a disability and are
in need of services to a disability services counselor on
the campus in which you are enrolled.

back
to DISABILITY SERVICES home
Comments and Questions - sdorsey@nvcc.edu
Revised 07/18/2005