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Customizing with UD Features: WiggleWorks
Index
Overview
¦ Multiple
Representations of Information ¦
Multiple
Options for Expression and
Control ¦ Multiple
Options for Engagement ¦
Customizing
Tips ¦ UD
Wish List ¦
Feedback
¦ Product
Information ¦ Disclaimer
Overview
The universal design features of WiggleWorks are
found embedded in the activities and within management
system options. WiggleWorks contains flexibility in
the representation of information, the means of expression
and control, and the different ways students can engage in
program activities.
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1. Multiple
Representations of Information
Text attributes are customizable throughout the
program.
You can easily change the size and color of text
to suit the demands of a particular session or to
save as a preference for individual students. You
can similarly customize both the color of the
highlight and text background.
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2. Multiple
Options for Expression and Control
WiggleWorks activities offer a variety of options
for expression such as writing, drawing, and recording.
In "Write," students can begin a composition by
typing text, by recording themselves speaking, by
drawing, or by placing words from a word list into
their text. As they compose, students can listen to
their recording, hear their text read back through
text to speech, or elaborate their drawing. These
options support multiple approaches to
composing.
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3. Multiple Options for
Engagement
The WiggleWorks management system offers ways for
teachers to structure learning experiences tightly or to
enable students broad latitude to explore, construct, and
create.
Teachers can present highly structured
activities by limiting students to one targeted
program area and a specific task. Through the
management system, select the program area and
eliminate the others. Use the teacher message
button to record specific instructions to focus the
lesson for each book or each page. (For example,
ask students to "copy into your word list the
things the author sees" or "record the name of
something you see in your neighborhood.")
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Customizing Tips
- In "My Book," support children with beginning
literacy skills by encouraging them to make very small
changes (such as coloring the page, erasing part of the
picture, changing a single word, or recording personal
comments on each page).
- In "My Book," provide minimum support for children
with high level skills. For example, skilled students
might erase the entire image and all of the words, record
a brand new story, type in the words (if necessary with
support from the My Words and Scholastic Words lists),
and draw new pictures. The new story can then be printed
or played back on screen.
- For young students just learning about text and for
students with low vision, choose large text. Teach
students how to click the magnifying glass in the lower
right corner to shrink the text to better see the
illustration or to engage in collaborative reading.
- For young children just learning to use a computer,
for children with low vision, and for children with
attention deficits, choose the large cursor.
- For children with color blindness or low vision,
change the colors for text, background, and highlight. A
good high-contrast combination for students with low
vision is yellow text, a black background, and a medium
highlight color such as light brown. Students with color
blindness may have difficulty seeing blue, yellow, and
green.
- Encourage children who are distractible to change the
text color and background before each session at the
computer. This ability to make the screen their own can
increase motivation to engage in reading.
- For students with attention deficits turn button
sounds off to avoid the delay caused while playing the
sound. Turn sounds off for children who are deaf or when
the program is used in a classroom setting where
headphones are not available and sounds would distract
others.
- For students accessing the computer via a single
switch, turn scanning on and adjust speed to suit each
student's needs. When students are working in pairs, make
sure both students know that the spacebar releases single
switch scanning and enables mouse use, after which
clicking on the small carat on the lower left of the
screen restarts scanning mode. This encourages
collaboration among students with varied physical
abilities.
- For students who are blind, turn on scanning and
talking buttons option. Each location in the scan will
speak its name, and the student can click the mouse to
select options. Turn on talk and type so that synthesized
speech provides ongoing feedback as blind students are
writing.
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Universal Design Wish
List
- Add text captions for all audio.
- Add a signed video for all audio.
- Include text description for all images.
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Feedback
How do you customize your students' learning with
WiggleWorks? We would like to add your ideas to our
Web site, space permitting. (If we use your submission, we
will give you credit.) Submit your Customizing Tips and UD
Wish List items via e-mail to udfeedback@cast.org.
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Product Information
For more information about teaching with WiggleWorks, see the
Teaching with WiggleWorks Web site.
For more information about WiggleWorks, see the
Teaching
Tools section of this Web site.
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Disclaimer
Although CAST created this product, we do not consider it
to be fully universally designed. Universal design is a
process that we too are learning. We include this product to
illustrate some of its universally designed features as part
of our educational purpose.
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Page updated August 04, 2000

© 1999-2009 CAST,
40 Harvard Mills Square, Foundry Street,
Wakefield, MA 01880-3233,
USA.
Telephone: +1 (781) 245-2212
Email:
cast@cast.org
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