There are literally hundreds of thousands of apps for the iPhone and other IOS devices. With so many options to choose from it can be difficult to pick which really do their job. The game gets trickier when you are a person living with a disability. The following list is a compilation of apps that are useful from areas like deaf and hard of hearing to cognitive issues to food allergies.

iComm-Free (iPhone)

Designed by a father with a disabled daughter, this app is ideal for both young children who can’t yet speak and children with disabilities. The child can choose what they need by looking at a set of images, for example if a child is hungry they can choose a banana.

Parking Mobility-Free (iPhone)

This app makes finding disabled parking places so much easier! By using the iPhones GPS capabilities, the app can clue you into the closest available spot. The more you use it and and update it, the more it helps others because you can mark accessible parking sports that are not currently on the map. You can also report violations of disabled parking abusers.

Sign Smith ASL Essential-$.99 (iPhone)

There are multiple versions of this app, the $.99 version offers over 100 signs for ASL words that you can use to learn sign language. Each word is accompanied by an animated person showing how to complete the sign movement. The Lite version is free and offers 20 words and the Ultimate version offers 1200 words for $4.99.

Deaftel

This app, while still in the early stages translates a hearing person’s voice into text during a phone call. Deaftel users can read and respond to the message with their keyboard. An animated figure informs users informs the recipient has picked up the phone and ended the call. Stay tuned, this app is sure to evolve with time!

Tap Tap- $2.99 (iPhone, iPod touch and iPad)

The app is designed to produce alerts when loud noises are made around the phone. The phone will begin to vibrate and flash alerts if there has been a loud noise or someone speaks in your direction. This app could be useful because it would help a user identify a knock at the door, an alarm sounding or that they are being addressed.

SoundAMP Lite-Free (iPhone, iTouch)

This little app does big things. Voted a top five medical app in 2010, it turns your iPhone into a listening device. It’s discrete and easy to use, simply plug in your buds to hear your friend, a lecture or your favorite radio station.

Food Additives 2-$3.99 (iPhone)

For some, consuming certain additives can be extremely hazardous and since so many foods these days have additives, it’s critical to know what is safe to eat. The app features a database of 450+ food additives and foods that contain them which is entirely self contained, which means no internet connection is needed to use it.

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Reference-$.99 (iPhone)

When the Americans with Disabilities Act was passed in 1990 it gave all Americans the same rights, regardless of disabilities. The law, although helpful, is complex. If you’re frequently in positions where you need to cite the law or want to have a handy way to reference it, this app will help. It’s formatted into sections, just like the real bill, and includes several FAQs.

To view even more helpful apps make sure to check out atla.org and silvercross.com.

Courtesy of agrability.org

A recent White House report indicated that while only 17% of the U.S. population lives in rural areas, rural residents account for 44% of the military. These rural veterans and military officers are returning to their ranches, farms and rural communities with disabilities such as post traumatic stress disorder(PTSD) and brain injuries at high rates.

Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and currently serving 24 states nationwide, AgrAbility seeks to eliminate (or minimize) obstacles that inhibit success in production agriculture or agriculture related occupations. However, soldiers today are facing more obstacles after returning home because of the injuries they sustained abroad. Farming, as hard as it was before, is now even more difficult to do for veterans coming home.

Organizations, like AgrAbility, are working to raise public awareness about returning our soldiers back to some semblance of normal life after returning home with a disability. Whether it be a traumatic brain injury, cognitive difficulties or for example, Indiana AgrAbility, on which our very own Wade Wingler is an advisory council member, is partnering with the Department of Veterans Affairs office in Indianapolis to develop a workshop for veterans, VA workers and other professionals on opportunities in agriculture and the benefits of horticulture therapy for returning veterans. Steve Swain, the rurual rehabilitation specialist with Breaking New Ground/Indiana AgrAbility, said he has worked with several military veterans with disabilities and offered to share the following story of one such opportunity:

“One of those veterans was disabled during a parachute accident when his spinal cord exploded causing paralysis. Mr. Swain was asked to assist the veteran in determining possible employment options. In a meeting at his home, options were discussed which included raising produce on his property, a woodworking business, a hands-on engineering design business, and gunsmithing. The discussion also included what he liked to do; what he didn’t like to do; the support he had among family and friends; what resources were available both financial and in-kind; what potential assistive technology was available for him in each endeavor. Mr. Swain later followed up with the veteran and found that he had gone thru a number of difficulties but had come thru them and started a woodworking business which operated out of his home. With the determination shown, this veteran will continue to make progress and operate a successful business which will allow him to support his family.”

In order to successfully transition a veteran back into a civilian life, AgrAbility has created a toolkit of sorts, called Agricultural Tools, Equipment, and Buildings for Farmers and Ranchers with Physical Disabilities or, for short, The Toolbox, filled with information and resources that is now available online. Users can “explore” and “search” the online toolbox to discover supplier information, photos and video clips for certain products.

Today, Wade kicks off a two part series about the accessibility of the Amazon Kindle. From text to speech and color contrast options, Wade dives into what makes these digital texts unique and more accessible for those with mobility issues and/or visual impairments.

To view Closed Captioning, click on the “CC” in the lower right corner of the video.

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Information from the INDATA Project is now available via podcast! Every Friday, the INDATA Project will release two podcasts featuring new assistive technology projects. The podcasts are available for viewing on the INDATA Project website and on iTunes. The “Assistive Technology Update” is a fast-paced weekly update for AT professionals and enthusiasts. The “Accessibility Minute” is designed for all listeners to provide assistive technology tips and tricks.

ATU034: ALS and Assistive Technolog (Alisa Brownlee), WHILL for wheelchairs, QR codes and AT, HTML5 Accessibility, Apple’s new e-text application, HEAR and There Audio Magazine, Laser Canes for the Blind

AM034: People First Language

Courtesy of Google Images

Classroom technology has come a long way since chalk and the blackboard. Now, more and more classrooms are being outfitted with laptops, SMART boards and even iPads. In order to keep up with the changing times and technologies, it is a good idea for teachers to be aware of the many apps available for them and how they can be used in the classroom.

Here is a list of just a few helpful apps to help you or the teacher in your life get started.

Teacher Tools

Evernote: lets you take notes, create to-do lists, search through images, and share your memories. Everything is seamlessly synchronized across all the devices and platforms you use, including Evernote for Mac, Evernote Web, and Evernote for Windows.

DropBox: free, online storage accessible wherever you are
ShowMe: turns the iPad into an interactive whiteboard

Time Timer: free timer, great for testing and reading breaks

Edu Teacher: lists best web tools and reviews educational websites

Socrative: Socrative is a smart student response system that empowers teachers to engage their classrooms through a series of educational exercises and games via smartphones, laptops, and tablets.

Multimedia Tools

Voice Thread: create and share dynamic conversations around documents, snapshots, diagrams and videos — basically anything there is to talk about. You can talk, type, and draw right on the screen.

Story Wheel: allows the user to spin a wheel of images and create a story, complete with animation, based on the image chosen.

Math Tools

ClockMaster: helps students learn to tell time and establish an understanding of the relationship between hours/minutes and analog/digital

Graphing Calculator: includes the usual arithmetic functions and exponentiation, along with roots, intersections and a unit converter among other

Science and Social Studies Tools

Discover: “Wikipedia in a magazine”

The Weather Channel

Molecules: 3D renderings

Be sure to check out the complete list and email Karen Janowski at karen.janowski@gmail.com if you have any questions.

Also, be sure to listen to the INDATA Podcast about iPads at Danville High School, Part 1 and Part 2, if you want to know more about what one school is doing to stay ahead of the technology curve.

Yesterday, Derek shared with us some of the most important realizations he came to while learning to be a blind college freshman. We learned that college campuses are inconsistent and confusing at times, loneliness is a very real emotion and good help is hard to find. Read on to learn the last two of Derek’s real and honest life lessons.

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4. Why Is It My Job to Educate People?

At the time I started college, I was using a guide dog. If I was ever without my dog, which was rare, I always had a white cane. One would assume that when people saw either the dog or the cane they would quickly know there was something not quite right with me. However, that usually was not the case. Both faculty and students alike had many issues understanding what it was like to be a blind person. I mean, after all, they were sighted. Note: a good friend once told me that being “sighted” sounded like he had a disease. I told him it was a disease he wanted. I must admit, I was quite surprised when so many people had no idea what to do around me. Usually, they just felt guilty about saying anything dealing with the sense of sight. They hated to use words like “see”, “look” or “watched”. Most of the time, I would get questions like, “did you see the new movie… Oh, sorry man.” You could tell they felt awkward and so did I. What I quickly realized was that it was my job to help them understand how to act, what to say and what it was like living with some level of blindness. And, honestly, it was really annoying. I just wanted these goof-offs to get it without me having to tell them. How hard is it? I’m blind. Get over it. But, after some soul-searching, I realized that if I didn’t teach them, no one would. Or, worse yet, someone who had no experience would try to teach them and totally mess things up. So, even on a college campus, where there are tons of different cultures and backgrounds, it was still my job as the “blind guy” to educate people about the world of vision impairment. Yes, it was annoying, but it was well worth it when the people actually learned and the awkwardness went away.

5. College + Technology = A Winning Combination

Since this is an assistive technology blog, I guess I will close this out talking about how important assistive technology in the world of going to college is. When I started college in 2002, as shocking as it is, technology had not come that far along. I did have a computer that ran ZoomText, Jaws and other similar software. I had a scanner, a printer and a CCTV. But, keep in mind that all of these products took up about a fourth of the small room that I had. Nowadays, we have things like iPads and laptops which don’t take up hardly any room. And, we blind folk can now use almost every mainstream technology item such as the iPhone. So, no longer do we have to stay in the “dark ages” with huge pieces of machinery that make our dorm rooms look like they are from the 1970s. Even CCTVs, although still somewhat large, have gotten much sleeker and don’t take up near as much room. And with the help of organizations, like Easter Seals Crossroads, there is no reason we as students shouldn’t know about and have the technology we need. I wish I had known how many things I could have done with the proper technology when I went to college. I had gotten some, but really didn’t know how to use it all. I strongly advise anyone either in college or getting ready to attend to take advantage of services provided by Crossroads. No, they did not tell me to write this so don’t stop reading now. It just seems only right to learn from people who know about these products and services so that when you go to gain your education, you won’t be spending a ton of time trying to learn the technology instead of learning about whatever it is you are studying.

I am sure that if I sat back and thought more, there would be a ton more things to write about. But, for now, these are just a few things I thought I would share with you about my college experience. I hope they have been helpful to you and caused you to think a little bit. For all those who are getting ready to attend college, let me give you a word of encouragement. College is a wonderful time. But, it is only is wonderful as you make it. So, (in as cheesy of voice as I can muster) MAKE IT WONDERFUL! And, if you have time, try to go to a class or two. They’re actually pretty interesting.

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