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Supplemental Award to NCAC
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Supplemental Award to the National Center on Accessing the General Curriculum
At CAST, Inc. (Center for Applied Special Technology)
40 Harvard Mills Square, Suite 3
Wakefield, MA 01880-3233
Background
The National Center on Accessing the General Curriculum (NCAC), a five year
cooperative agreement funded by the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP)
at the U. S. Department of Education, is awarded a supplement to extend its
activities by coordinating and facilitating the establishment of a voluntary
national standard for accessible digital instructional materials for students
with disabilities.
No Child Left Behind requires accountability for the educational progress
of all students, including students with disabilities. Therefore, schools throughout
the nation are faced with the urgent need to use evidence-based practices and
emerging technologies to bridge the achievement gap for students with disabilities.
As a result of this new accountability for all students and existing requirements
under IDEA '97 to assure that students with disabilities have access to,
participate and progress in the general education curriculum; as well as participation
in large-scale assessments; the availability of accessible core curriculum materials
has become critically important to state and local educational agencies. Recently
several key states - California, Texas, New York, Kentucky, and Maryland - have
enacted new or amended legislation requiring the consideration of accessibility
in the instructional materials procurement process. The intent of these state
legislative initiatives is to ensure that students with disabilities have access
to appropriate learning resources at the same time that "traditional"
materials are made available to their non-disabled peers. Authentic access,
participation and progress of students with disabilities in the general education
curriculum will not occur until accessible, flexible, and customizable learning
resources are widely available to all students, particularly those who are print
impaired.
Developing an efficient system for consumers and all parties involved in the
production and distribution of accessible core curriculum instructional materials
is of fundamental and primary concern to the U. S. Department of Education.
To this end, the creation of a national file format is of significant importance
to students, educators, publishers, technology specialists, and advocacy groups.
Existing and emerging standards related to electronic publishing provide for
the designation of a flexible core format that separates the content of instructional
materials from its presentation, allowing for output of multiple accessible
versions of materials from a single source. The designation of a national instructional
materials accessibility standard would:
- Promote an agreed-upon file format that is sufficiently flexible to
create multiple output transformations (Braille-ready, ANSI/NISO Z39.86, ebook,
etc.) from the same source file - eliminating the need for repetitious and often
ineffective transformations (print-to-Braille; print-to-ebook, etc.);
- Ensure the quality, consistency, and timely distribution of accessible
curriculum materials - a step toward eliminating the need for publishers to
produce many formats for multiple separate requirements; the often inefficient
and duplicative local efforts to digitize textbooks; and the subsequent long
delay in getting materials to some students;
- Establish a unified approach for the development of accessible learning
materials; and
- Facilitate, at the state level, the development of a systemic approach
to providing accommodations for diverse learners by increasing their capacity
to acquire and transform digital curricular materials, thereby eliminating the
struggle to implement solutions to the need to provide instructional materials
on a student-by-student basis (particularly for blind and print impaired students).
National instructional materials accessibility standard has the potential to
significantly enhance the learning opportunities available to all students.
The mandate for Expert Panel members to achieve agreement on a national file
format will drive the creation of solutions to a number of problems. For example,
one specific issue that currently impedes the widespread availability of accessible
digital materials is the technological conflict between accessibility and Digital
Rights Management (DRM), technology-based security that limits unauthorized
distribution. At the present time, for DRM to be effective, the text in ebooks
must be "locked" so that it cannot be copied. Almost all screen
reader and supported reading software currently in use relies on copying text,
which the program then "speaks" aloud. These popular assistive technology
tools are rendered useless when trying to read locked text. The development
of a voluntary standard for accessible instructional materials will need to
address this, and other issues.
Scope of Work
To achieve a voluntary standard for accessible instructional materials NCAC
will complete, as part of its cooperative agreement, the following activities:
In collaboration with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
at the Department of Commerce, the NCAC will convene an Expert Panel from
each of the following groups:
- Organizations that represent consumers (e.g., blind or print disabilities);
- Organizations that represent parents of students with disabilities
(e.g., blind or print disabilities);
- Instructional materials publishers or their organizational designees
(e.g., School Division, Association of American Publishers);
- Assistive technology developers or their organizational designees
(e.g., Assistive Technology Industry Association);
- Producers of materials in specialized formats (e.g., Recordings for
the Blind and Dyslexic, American Printing House for the Blind, BookShare, etc.);
- State special education program administrators or their organizational
designees (e.g., National Association of State Directors of Special Education);
- Special educators and local administrators;
- State textbook administrators from adoption states or their organizational
designees (e.g., National Association of State Textbook Administrators) and
equivalent personnel from non-adoption states;
- Developers of accessibility, publishing software and supporting technologies;
- Information technology standards organizations; (e.g., The Access
Board);
- Data transformation organizations with substantial experience in accessible
file format preparation and automated conversion technologies;
- Any other organization or interest that the Secretary of Education
determines to be appropriate.
In addition to delegates from the constituencies listed above, the Panel will
solicit commentary and guidance from NCAC partner members, including Harvard
University Law School. The Secretary of Education will designate at least one
employee from the Department as an ex-officio member of the Expert Panel.
The Expert Panel will meet three times to develop and detail a proposed instructional
materials accessibility standard in compliance with the copyright constraints
of 2U.S.C. 15a, "An Act to Provide Books for the Adult Blind" and
subsequent copyright amendments built upon that Act (e. g., the 1996 "Chafee
Amendment") which authorize the provision of accessible versions of non-dramatic
works to students with qualifying print disabilities. Additional discussion
among panel participants will occur in a secure online forum developed and maintained
by CAST.
The initial meeting of the panel will establish the areas of need, the next
meeting will review proposed technical solutions and standards, and the final
meeting will draft a document of recommendations. All meetings of the Expert
Panel will be open to the public; and dates, times, and locations of Expert
Panel meetings will be posted on the NCAC website.
The Expert Panel will be charged with providing the Secretary of Education
with a set of technical specifications to facilitate the efficient delivery
of accessible instructional materials, a timeline for the implementation of
the proposed standards, and process for assessing the success of standards implementation.
The Secretary of Education will publish the proposed standards in the Federal
Register for public comment.
NCAC Capacity
NCAC is in a unique position to initiate and oversee the work of this Expert
Panel. The Center has a proven capacity to convene diverse groups with convergent
interests and achieve a unified perspective. In Fall 2002, the Center will jointly
host, with Harvard Law School and the Association of American Publishers School
Division, Policy, Property and Permissions: A Discussion of Accessible Curriculum
Materials, an OSEP-supported national forum on the challenges facing those desiring
accessible digital curriculum materials, copyright holders, and publishers.
Further, NCAC can draw upon the expertise of a number of CAST staff that have:
- Emerged as national experts in the adaptation of inflexible print
materials into accessible digital versions;
- Acquired considerable expertise in the automated transformation of
core curriculum materials into a variety of file formats;
- Contributed to American Foundation for the Blind’s "Solutions
Forum" (which authored the IMAA), the Open eBook Forum, and the DAISY
Consortium, and;
- Served as expert advisors to legislatures in Kentucky, California
and Arizona in the development of accessible textbook legislation.
Page updated April 11, 2003

© 1999-2009 CAST,
40 Harvard Mills Square, Foundry Street,
Wakefield, MA 01880-3233,
USA.
Telephone: +1 (781) 245-2212
Email:
cast@cast.org
This Web Site was developed pursuant to cooperative agreement #H324H990004
under CFDA 84.324H between CAST and the Office of Special Education
Programs, U.S. Department of Education. However, the opinions expressed
herein do not necessarily reflect the position or policy of the U.S.
Department of Education or the Office of Special Education Programs and no
endorsement by that office should be inferred.
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