Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired

The needs of vision impaired students are quite different to sighted students. The increasing use of e-learning means higher education must move to multi-modal user interfaces in order to make e-learning materials accessible to all students. E-Learning materials (particularly in the sciences and t...

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Main Authors: Armstrong, Helen, Murray, Iain, Permvattana, R.
Format: Conference Paper
Published: IEEE 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12997
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author Armstrong, Helen
Murray, Iain
Permvattana, R.
author_facet Armstrong, Helen
Murray, Iain
Permvattana, R.
author_sort Armstrong, Helen
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The needs of vision impaired students are quite different to sighted students. The increasing use of e-learning means higher education must move to multi-modal user interfaces in order to make e-learning materials accessible to all students. E-Learning materials (particularly in the sciences and technology) are predominantly visual, presented via computer keyboard and screen. Software and devices designed to aid the visin impaired are unable to decipher most images and visual-centric objects contained in e-learning materials.This paper discusses a project undertaken over the past two years to modify the content and presentation of Cisco certification e-learning courses to enable accessibility by vision impaired and blind students. These modifications necessitated rewriting the learning materials so they could be effectively presented via multi-modal user interfaces to vision impaired students, involving speech, aufio, haptics and force-feed devices and methods.Evaluatin of sections of the project by the vision impaired students using a model based upon Stufflebeam's CIPP model and Kirkpatrick's Four-Level training program evaluation model has been carried out and the results are presented.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-129972017-09-13T15:54:08Z Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired Armstrong, Helen Murray, Iain Permvattana, R. information technology handicapped aids user interface human factors educational technology The needs of vision impaired students are quite different to sighted students. The increasing use of e-learning means higher education must move to multi-modal user interfaces in order to make e-learning materials accessible to all students. E-Learning materials (particularly in the sciences and technology) are predominantly visual, presented via computer keyboard and screen. Software and devices designed to aid the visin impaired are unable to decipher most images and visual-centric objects contained in e-learning materials.This paper discusses a project undertaken over the past two years to modify the content and presentation of Cisco certification e-learning courses to enable accessibility by vision impaired and blind students. These modifications necessitated rewriting the learning materials so they could be effectively presented via multi-modal user interfaces to vision impaired students, involving speech, aufio, haptics and force-feed devices and methods.Evaluatin of sections of the project by the vision impaired students using a model based upon Stufflebeam's CIPP model and Kirkpatrick's Four-Level training program evaluation model has been carried out and the results are presented. 2006 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12997 10.1109/ITHET.2006.339759 IEEE fulltext
spellingShingle information technology
handicapped aids
user interface human factors
educational technology
Armstrong, Helen
Murray, Iain
Permvattana, R.
Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title_full Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title_fullStr Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title_short Evaluating Cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
title_sort evaluating cisco e-learning courses modified for the vision impaired
topic information technology
handicapped aids
user interface human factors
educational technology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12997