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Introductory Remarks Regarding Policy, Property and Permissions:
A Discussion of Accessible Curriculum Materials
by Skip Stahl [2]
Throughout the United States, teachers of K-12 students are struggling to find
curricular materials that are accessible and educationally relevant to students
with disabilities. Because few of these products exist, many teachers are adapting
their existing materials by copying or digitizing them so that they can be used
with assistive technologies. On a national scale this results in a redundant
and costly situation for schools and taxpayers alike. Many other teachers continue
teaching without accessible materials, consequently failing to meet the learning
requirements of students with special needs. This has considerable social costs
for students and communities, particularly considering how many students have
identified special needs.
Nationwide there are nearly six million K-12 students with identified special
needs who are covered by the 1997 reauthorization of the federal Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA '97). Over 90% of the students served
under IDEA in 1998 were classified in one of four disability categories-learning
disabilities (51%), speech or language impairments (20%) mental retardation
(11%) and emotional disturbance (9%). According to the U.S. Department of Education's
Office of Special Education Programs, more students with disabilities are being
educated in regular classrooms. In fact over 95% of students with disabilities
ages 6-21 attend school with their non-disabled peers. These statistics reflect
the very large group of diverse learners who must "access, participate
and progress" in the general education curriculum.
The primary goal of IDEA '97 was to improve outcomes for students with disabilities
by including them in the standards, methods, and accountability of the general
curriculum.[3]
To that end, IDEA '97 specifically requires that public schools adapt the content
in general education classrooms to meet the specific learning needs of special
education students. Underlying the law itself is the understanding that the
format, content, means of presentation, organization, and means of assessment
in standard curricular materials can themselves present barriers to many learners.
For example, printed textbooks lack
the flexibility that would support access to meaningful learning opportunities
for students with disabilities.[4]
In addition, students need more than
access to content: they must be able to interact with and learn from the curriculum,
meaning that the level of challenge and support, the means of self-expression,
and the sources of interest and engagement are suitable for their skills and
needs.[5]
However, when teachers face the challenge of modifying their existing curricula
to meet the needs of students with disabilities, the task can prove to be daunting.
To modify the "one size fits all" materials of most existing curricula
requires enormous commitments of time, expertise and resources. This necessarily
limits the available time for actual teaching and preparation.Although curriculum
adaptation can be effective in individual instances, and can serve as a necessary
stopgap, this approach does not contribute to a systemic solution.
Fortunately, technological innovation has enabled the transformation of print-based
educational materials such as textbooks into flexible digital formats. Unlike
print, where one size supposedly fits all, digital media can be adjusted for
different learners. The nature of digital media provides flexibility and versatility
that allows for multiple representations and multiple ways to interact with
content. Digital text has the potential to provide greater accessibility to
content.
State and Local Education Agencies, under growing pressure from the public
and state legislatures to provide effective curriculum materials and assistance
to students with disabilities, have begun to demand that textbooks and other
curriculum materials be provided in accessible digital formats. Major adoption
states (CA, TX, GA, KY) have started requiring publishers to provide these materials,
and other states are expected to quickly follow suit. In an effort to standardize
this process, federal legislation (The Instructional Materials Accessibility
Act or IMAA) is moving through Congress in a joint effort by advocacy groups
for the visually-impaired and the Association of American Publishers. If enacted
in its current form, IMAA will create a national repository for digital textbooks
and require publishers to contribute their titles in flexible digital
format.
These legal developments have initiated many adjustments for K-12 publishers.
Although a few of the major publishing houses have useable digital versions
of their titles, the majority of these editions do not meet accessibility standards.
Similarly, the stripped-down ASCII text required for Braille in more than half
the states also does not meet the new federal stipulations. For supplemental
publishers, the creation of these accessible digital versions may well be outside
the scope of their available resources.
Understandably, K-12 publishers have restricted budgets and do not wish to
incur additional costs to produce and service digital versions of print titles
which are well into their multi-year life cycles. Yet all students today, even
those who cannot access standard print materials, must participate in and pass
high-stakes tests. Schools scramble to scan and use publishers' textbooks as
best they can, but this can be a costly effort that inevitably takes teachers
away from teaching many of their students while they attend to the needs of
a few. Thus, schools are increasingly interested in seeing publishers provide
digital versions of the texts their teachers use.
In addition to meeting the accessibility needs of students with disabilities,
the creative potential for accessible digital materials is as limitless as the
imagination of the product design team. In the future, accessible digital products
could be used to make learning more exciting, interactive and individually-tailored
to the needs, learning style and interests of all students. Obviously, a major
shift toward the more widespread use of accessible digital products in the classroom
will take considerable time for a variety of reasons. However, the aforementioned
legal developments at the federal and state level suggest that soon, educators
and content providers will need to gear up quickly to prepare truly accessible
digital versions of their products.
It is for these reasons that publishers, lawyers, and technology specialists
need to spend time discussing the barriers which exist today in the field of
accessible curriculum materials, and creatively envisioning solutions that will
meet the needs of students, educators and publishers. ?
Page updated November 26, 2002

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