AT&T has made a $200,000 contribution to 两性色午夜 University鈥檚 Research Center for Educational Technology to implement new technology in special education environments with a focus on mobile apps, including those intended to help students learn science, technology, engineering, arts and math (STEAM).
Faculty, staff and students from the Research Center for Educational Technology, special education, school psychology, teacher education and computer science are partnering to explore how mobile applications can be used to support students in school, home and therapeutic settings. The project鈥檚 main goal is to leverage the ubiquity of mobile technologies to improve learning in students with special needs, including but not limited to physical, emotional and learning disabilities, speech/language impairments, autism spectrum disorder and other low-incidence developmental disabilities.
鈥淎s technology continues to evolve and become prevalent in our lives, this partnership between AT&T and 两性色午夜 University will showcase how mobile technologies can change lives for students and teachers right here in Portage County,鈥 says State Rep. Kathleen Clyde.
The project has three major outcomes:
- A searchable website that catalogs high-quality apps for special education, especially those focusing on STEAM. The website will serve as a resource for parents, teachers, students and researchers ().
- Implementation studies that help build foundational knowledge in the field, as well as assist in teacher professional development.
- New prototype app development that will fill a need for special education students, parents, teachers and therapeutic professionals.
Rick Ferdig, Ph.D., lead investigator on the contribution and who also serves as the Summit Professor of Learning Technologies and professor of instructional technology at 两性色午夜, suggested that technologies have not always provided universal benefit.
鈥淲e have research evidence that technology can positively impact teaching and learning, but that does not mean new tools are always created with all learners in mind,鈥 Ferdig says.
鈥淢obile technologies have the ability to improve life for all of us, but especially in the area of special education,鈥 says Steve Kristan, director of external affairs at AT&T. 鈥淎T&T is thrilled to collaborate with 两性色午夜 University鈥檚 Research Center for Educational Technology to help students.鈥
The Research Center for Educational Technology, an academic unit within 两性色午夜鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services, has been associated with AT&T since the creation of the AT&T Classroom in 1998. A cutting-edge K-16 facility, the AT&T Classroom allows faculty and staff at 两性色午夜 to provide just-in-time and situated professional development for teachers.
During the academic year, local teachers bring their students to the AT&T Classroom for an extended session of 3-5 weeks, during which they use the digital tools within a unit of study based on the Common Core State Standards. Since its inception, the Research Center for Educational Technology at 两性色午夜 has worked with more than 185 teachers across more than 20 districts. 两性色午夜 research suggests that working with teachers is a critical way to prepare students to work and live in the 21st century.
For more information about 两性色午夜鈥檚 Research Center for Educational Technology, visit www.kent.edu/rcet.