Course
Syllabus
Contents:
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Background Information on
Assistive Technology: Assistive Technology (AT) is a general term
that includes devices, services, and policies that benefits older adults and
people with disabilities, the institutions and facilities where beneficial
efforts take place, as well as the process that makes them available to this
population. An AT device is one that has a diagnostic, functional, adaptive, or
rehabilitative benefit. Engineers employ an AT process to understand the
challenge, design, develop, test, and bring to market new devices. Other
professionals are involved in evaluating their need, prescribing them,
supplying them, installing and setting them up, instructing their use, and
assessing their benefit. These products promote greater independence, increased
opportunities and participation, and an enhanced quality of life for people
with disabilities by enabling them to perform tasks that they were formerly
unable to accomplish (or had great difficulty accomplishing, or required
assistance) through enhanced or alternate methods of interacting with the
world.
There are an estimated 61 million
Americans (25 percent of the population) with some level of disability which
limits their ability to fully participate in society. As the nation ages, the
number of people experiencing such limitations will certainly increase. New AT
devices incorporating novel designs and emerging technologies have the
potential to further improve the lives of people with disabilities and older
adults.
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ENGR110/210 consists of
semi-weekly lectures from experts in the field, including designers,
entrepreneurs, clinicians, and users. Beyond these lectures, students can
choose to engage in a project experience that includes project identification,
understanding the problem, and design. These students interact with users of
assistive technology, design coaches, and project partners. Other students can
select to write a comprehensive report on a organization that works with
persons with a disability or an older adult.
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Expectations for Students: By
taking Perspectives in Assistive Technology, students will:
-
Gain a full appreciation for and an
understanding of the engineering, medical, and social aspects associated with
the design, development, and use of assistive technology,
-
Learn about a wide variety of
issues in technology development, including intellectual property rights and
best practices in community engagement, and
-
Engage in a comprehensive design
experience that includes working with users of assistive technology to identify
challenges, prototype solutions, perform user testing, practice iterative
design, and communicate results.
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Overview: The Winter Quarter
ENGR110/210 explores technology that benefits people with disabilities
and older adults.
The course consists of online
semi-weekly class sessions that features discussions, guest lectures, virtual
field trips, a virtual assistive technology faire, a film screening, and
student project presentations.
Enrollment is open to any student -
undergrad or grad - from any discipline.
The course content is non-technical.
There are no exams, quizzes, problem sets, or finals.
There is an opportunity to work on
projects that address real problems experienced by individuals in the local
community. These projects are pursued individually. Students choose projects
from pitches by people from the community who would benefit from a device that
would enhance their function, improve their independence, and / or increase
their quality of life.
Students can also suggest their own
projects - typically one that benefits themself (as a student with a
disability) or a family member (or friend) with a disability. Such projects
must be approved by the instructor.
The flexible course structure includes
project options as well as a lectures-only option. The project option is 2
credit units, while taking the course as a seminar (just attending lectures, no
project) is 1 credit unit CR/NC.
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Course
Description: Perspectives in Assistive Technology is a
one-quarter (10-week) course taught at Stanford during the Winter Quarter that
explores the design, development, and use of technology that benefits people
with disabilities and older adults. Students from diverse disciplines (mostly
mechanical engineers) and from all academic years (approximately equally
divided between upper class and graduate students) have enrolled in the
course.
The course combines online discussions,
presentations by guest lecturers, individual projects, virtual site visits to
medical and engineering facilities, a virtual assistive technology faire, a
film screening, and project presentations by students.
This course consists of twice-weekly
presentations by guest lecturers who are experts in the greater assistive
technology field, including product designers, entrepreneurs, researchers,
clinicians, and assistive technology users. Lectures are open to all students
and community members (local individuals without a Stanford affiliation),
including non-enrolled students interested in a particular lecture and
individuals with disabilities. Over the years, guest lecturers have addressed a
wide variety of issues in assistive technology such as disability and
rehabilitation, research and development, service learning, design process and
brainstorming, design software, intellectual property, technology licensing,
personal perspectives, and human subjects in research.
Tours of local medical facilities and
engineering laboratories (VA Spinal Cord Injury and Brain Injury Services and
Stanford Motion and Gait Analysis Laboratory) as well as the Magical Bridge
Playground (a facility designed to be accessible and inclusive for kids and
parents with disabilities) are scheduled during the quarter. Tours will be
conducted virtually this quarter.
The Assistive Technology Faire provides
an opportunity for students and community members to get an up-close look at a
variety of commercial devices. Users of assistive technology products as well
as small companies and agencies serving individuals with disabilities and older
adults bring assistive technology devices to display and demonstrate. The Faire
will be also conducted virtually this coming quarter.
Beyond these lectures and tours,
students can participate in an individual design project experience that
addresses problems faced by users of assistive technology or research or
research and write a comprehensive report on a facility that serves people with
disabilities or older adults.
The course is taught by David L. Jaffe
who holds a BS degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Michigan
and a MS degree in Biomedical Engineering from Northwestern University. Prior
to coming to Stanford, he was a Research Biomedical Engineer at the VA Palo
Alto Health Care System's Rehabilitation Research and Development Center. At
the VA his interests were designing, developing, testing, and bringing to
market microcomputer-based devices for veterans with disabilities including
communication, mobility, and information systems.
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Course Description on Explore
Courses: ENGR 110: Perspectives in Assistive Technology (ENGR 110)
(ENGR 210)
Online seminar and student project course that explores
the personal, medical, social, ethical, and technical challenges surrounding
the design, development, and use of technologies that improve the lives of
people with disabilities and older adults. Guest lecturers include engineers,
clinicians, researchers, and individuals with disabilities. Students from any
discipline are welcome to enroll. Two credit units for students who pursue an
individual assistive technology project (letter grade or S/NC) with a community
partner. One credit unit for seminar attendance only (S/NC). Designated a
Cardinal Course by the Haas Center for Public Service.Link
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- Teaching Team:
- David L. Jaffe, MS - dljaffe
-at- stanford.edu
- Course Lecturer
- Kat McNeill - katriona -at-
stanford.edu
- Course Assistant
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Credentials: The
course:
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Objectives:
-
Expose students to the engineering,
medical, and social issues facing engineers, researchers, entrepreneurs,
clinicians, older adults, and individuals with disabilities in the design,
development, and use of assistive technology
-
Engage students in a project
experience that exercises team working skills (leadership & organization)
and applies an engineering design process to address difficulties experienced
by individuals with disabilities and older adults
-
Provide an opportunity for students
to interact with users of assistive technology in the local community along
with health care professionals, coaches, and project partners
-
Enhance students' problem solving,
critical thinking, and communication skills, with specific emphasis on in-class
discussions, report writing, and project presentations
-
Encourage students to use their
engineering skills and design expertise to help individuals with disabilities
and older adults increase their independence and improve their quality of
life
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Course Laptop
Policy: During in-person class session - To encourage learning,
discussion, and respectful interaction between students, the teaching team, and
guest lecturers, the use of digital devices such as laptops, smartphones,
tablets, etc. is only permitted before and after class and during the short
class session break.
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Zoom
Etiquette:
- Join the Zoom class session
early
- Meet with instructor before or after
class
- Enter the class session with Video
on and Mute on
- Use a profile photo of yourself if
you have to temporarily leave the session or have a poor internet
connection
- Minimize distractions
- Use the Raise Hand function if you
have a question
- Send a private chat message to
record your attendance - use your real name
- Reframe from eating in the session,
drinking is ok
- Be respectful of others
- Respond to instructor's chat and
poll questions
- Ask questions about unclear
concepts
- Do not watch videos, listen to
music, read your email, or use other applications (other than note-taking apps)
while attending class
- Uncurb your enthusiasm
- Bring your passion for
learning
- Prepare to be challenged and
motivated
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In-class
Discussions: Each class session typically begins with a fifteen
to twenty minute interactive discussion that promotes critical thinking,
analysis, and questioning.
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Class
Sessions: Presentations are given by guest lecturers who address
a wide variety of issues in assistive technology such as disability and
rehabilitation, research and development, service learning, brainstorming and
need-finding, design software, intellectual property, technology licensing,
personal perspectives, and human subjects in research.
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Tours:
Virtual tours of local medical facilities and engineering laboratories are
scheduled during the quarter.
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One Credit Unit Lecture-only
Option: For students whose schedule does not permit working on a
team-based project in ENGR110/210, one and two credit unit lecture-only
options are offered. As there are no assignments or exams, the grading is
Credit / No Credit - no letter grades are given for these options.
Students enrolled with the one unit option must attend at least 15 class
sessions, including the first class session, Introduction to Assistive
Technology.
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Two Credit Unit Project
Option: Projects for Two Credit Units differ from previous year's Team
Projects in that they (projects for Two Credit Units) may address simpler
problems, have less complex solutions, may not require a fabrication task, may
not involve a user, may not require following an engineering design process, or
result in a lower level of prototype functionality (such as producing a CAD
design instead of a working physical prototype). For example, a project may
focus on investigating a service related to assistive technology such as
connecting older adults with each other or with college students.
Optionally, two students may work
collectively on projects for Two Credit Units, sharing these tasks: obtaining
background information and brainstorming. However each student is required to
pursue, present, and report on different solutions.
Students enrolled in the two credit
unit project option are required to attend at least 15 class sessions,
including:
Two Credit
Unit Project Assignment Students are asked to choose and pursue a
specific project activity, present their work, submit a final comprehensive
final project report that encompasses their efforts for the entire quarter, and
reflect on their experiences.
-
Project ideas come from various
public and private sources in the community, such as the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) Palo Alto Health Care System's Spinal Cord Injury Center, local
assistive living facilities, senior centers, as well as from foundations like
the Muscular Dystrophy Association, or from individuals.
-
Funding to support the course and
student projects come from Stanford sources, company partners, foundations,
etc.
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Three Credit Unit Team Project
Option: Due to the online nature of the course this academic year, there
will be no three credit unit team project option.
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Assignment Dues
Dates:
Assignment |
Date |
Project
Report |
Thursday, March 18th |
Individual
Reflection |
Thursday, March 18th |
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Over-enrollment:
There is no cap on enrollment this
year.
Here are all the enrollment options for
students to consider:
-
Individual Project Option -
Students may enroll in the course for 2 credit units and work on an individual
project for a letter grade or S/NC and are required to attend at least 15 class
sessions.
-
Seminar Option - Students
may enroll in the course for 1 credit unit and are required to attend at least
15 class sessions for CR/NC with no project participation.
-
Taking the Course Twice
Option - Please note that students may enroll in the course (as ENGR110)
for either of these 1 credit unit options in the current year and take the
course (as ENGR210) for 3 credit units in a subsequent year with credit given
for lectures already attended. This option would not apply to graduating
seniors. (Three students have exercised this option.)
-
Independent Study Option -
Students may enroll in ME191 (Independent Study) in a subsequent quarter and
work on an individual project for a letter grade and a negotiated number of
credit units.
-
Next Year Option - Students
who will be around next year may sit in (without enrolling) on lectures they
find interesting and enroll in the course the following year with credit given
for the lectures already attended.
-
Sit in on Class Session
Option - Students may choose not to enroll in the course, but are most
welcome to sit in on any class sessions that interest them.
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Excuses:
A student who has missed a course event
(class session, field trip, or deadline) or has knowledge he/she will miss a
course event should not provide a reason for his/her absence as this
requires the instructor to make a judgment on the validity of his/her reason.
Instead, the student should ask how to make up the missed event.
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Missed Class Session
Policy:
-
All enrolled students are
encouraged to attend all ENGR110/210 lectures.
-
Enrolled students taking the course
for 1 unit must attend at least 15 lectures including the first lecture,
Introduction to Assistive
Technology.
-
One Excused Class Session for
Student Project
-
Students taking the course for
2 units may be excused from attending one class session (after
Week 6) to work on their projects. The instructor may designate which class
session can be missed. Class sessions that are mandatory are:
-
The student must inform the
instructor of their desire to work on their project prior to the class
session that will be missed.
-
Making Up Missed Class
Sessions
-
Missed class sessions may be
made up by first reviewing the material from the missed class session: view the
video (taking notes), following along with the PowerPoint slides, reading any
handout material, viewing any photos and other videos, and browsing any
weblinks posted on the lecture webpage.
-
Next arrange to meet with the
instructor to discuss the missed class session. Be prepared to lead the
conversation on the class session's content with questions, comments,
observations, thoughts, and reflections. Consider "What one item did you hear,
see, or learn that was new, surprising, interesting, or provided a new
perspective?" The meeting should take about 20 minutes.
-
After the meeting, the student
will be credited with "attending" the class session.
-
Missed class sessions should be
made up at the earliest earliest opportunity (ideally within a week) as it may
be more difficult to find the time to review the material and meet near the end
of the quarter.
-
Grade Impact for Missed Class
Sessions
If one or more required class
sessions are missed and are not made up by the deadline for grade submission,
the student's grade will be affected as follows:
-
For students taking the course
as Credit / No Credit, the following options are available for student
who have not attended at least 15 class sessions:
- Receive No Credit for
the course.
- Request to receive
Incomplete for the course. If subsequently the missed class sessions are
made up, the grade will be changed to Credit.
-
For students taking the course
for a Letter Grade, the following options are available for students who
have missed one or more class sessions:
- Deduct one incremental
letter grade (ie "A" becomes "A-", etc) for each missed class session not made
up.
- Request to receive
Incomplete for the course. If subsequently the missed class session(s)
are made up, a letter grade reflecting the student's performance will be
recorded.
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Grading:
|
Final Report Final Presentation Individual
Reflection Participation * |
30% 30% 10% 30% |
- * Participation includes meeting
with instructor, actively listening, posing questions to the guest speakers and
the course instructor, engaging in class discussions, verbalizing thoughts and
analyses, and submitting Weekly Individual Reports.
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Letters of Recomendations and
Employment References:
- Students: Please strive to make your
qualifications, skills, and abilities evident.
Letters
of Recommendation:
-
Be aware that the course instructor
is not a professor, nor does he have a PhD. Make sure this is ok with the
agency or institution to which the Letter of Recommendation is being
sent.
-
For Mechanical Engineering students
seeking a Coterminal
Degree, a cummulative grade point average of 3.7 is highly desirable. If
this average is met, a Letter of Recommendation is a simple formality for the
instructor to complete. The student must waive his / her right to inspect the
contents of the Recommendation. Submit a filled-out, signed, and dated
Recommendation Form (Coterminal Application for ME
Program - page 6) to the instructor - no envelope is
needed.
-
For students seeking a Coterminal
Degree in CS, the recommender is asked to write candidly about the
candidate's:
- qualifications,
- potential to carry on advanced
study in the field specified,
- intellectual
independence,
- capacity for analytical
thinking,
- ability to organize and express
ideas clearly, and
- potential for
teaching.
In addition, the recommender is
instructed to describe specific examples of attributes such as motivation,
intellect, and maturity.
-
For students seeking to apply to
MIT"s Media Arts and Science graduate program, the recommender is asked to
respond to these questions:
- What particularly qualifies this
applicant for study at MIT?
- What are the applicant's
accomplishments in research or independent projects?
- How does the applicant compare
to other students you know who have attended MIT?
- Can the student clearly
communicate ideas in written and spoken English?
- Do you have any reservations
about the applicant's ability to succeed at MIT?
-
For students who desire a Letter of
Recommendation for a university application or job employment, a declaration
must be made at the start of the quarter and the student must meet with the
instructor three times during the quarter (beginning, midway, and end)
to provide the instructor an opportunity to follow the student's progress
throughout the course.
-
Requests for a Letter of
Recommendation must be made at least a month in advance of the due
date.
-
Please review this webpage, "Getting a
Letter of Recommendation" by Scott D. Anderson, a Lecturer in
the Computer Science Department of Wellesley College.
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Students with
Disabilities:
Creating and enhancing a supportive
educational environment is one of the University's highest priorities. Ensuring
that students with disabilities have full access to all instructional settings
is part of the University's efforts.
Students with Documented Disabilities:
Students who may need an academic accommodation based on the impact of a
disability must initiate the request with the
Office of Accessible
Education (OAE). Professional staff will evaluate the request with required
documentation, recommend reasonable accommodations, and prepare an
Accommodation Letter for faculty. Unless the student has a temporary
disability, Accommodation letters are issued for the entire academic year.
Students should contact the OAE as soon as possible since timely notice is
needed to coordinate accommodations. The OAE is located at 563 Salvatierra
Walk; phone: 650/723-1066.
If you require a disability-related
accommodation to participate in the course, please contact the
course instructor. Requests should be
made at least two weeks in advance.
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ENGR110/210
Lecture Schedule - 2021 |
Week |
Lecture Date |
Description |
Assignments |
Deliverables |
1 |
Jan 12th |
Course Overview & Introduction to Assistive
Technology David L. Jaffe, MS
|
Assignment -
Project Report & Presentation handed
out |
This is a required class
session for all students |
|
Jan 14th |
Project Pitch Day Project
Suggestors
|
|
Project Selection due
Tuesday, January 19th
This is a required class
session for students working on projects |
2 |
Jan 19th |
Class Discussion Creating Assistive Technologies - Understanding the
Problem Gayle Curtis
|
|
|
|
Jan 21st |
Class Discussion Bridging the Gap between Consumers and Products in
Rehabilitation Medicine Deborah E. Kenney, MS, OTR/L
|
|
|
3 |
Jan 26th |
Class Discussion Perspectives of Stanford Students with a
Disability Sylvia Colt-Lacayo, Gene Sung-Ho Kim, Tilly Kennedy
Griffiths, and Abby Tamara
|
|
|
|
Jan 28th |
Class Discussion Designing Beyond the Norm to Meet the Needs of All
People Peter W. Axelson, MSME, ATP, RET
|
|
|
4 |
Feb 2nd |
Class Discussion Bionic Ears: Cochlear Implants and the Future of
Assistive Technology Lindsey Dolich Felt, PhD
|
|
|
|
Feb 4th |
Class Discussion Issues of Human Interface Design Gary M.
Berke, MS, CP, FAAOP
|
|
|
5 |
Feb 9th |
Class Discussion From Idea to Market: Eatwell, Assistive Tableware for
Persons with Cognitive Impairments Sha Yao
|
|
|
|
Feb 11th |
Class Discussion The Design and Control of Exoskeletons for
Rehabilitation Katherine Strausser, PhD
|
|
|
6 |
Feb 16th |
Student Project Updates
|
|
This is a required class
session for students working on projects |
|
Feb 18th |
Class Discussion Aesthetics Matter & Empathy and Problem
Definition Jules Sherman |
|
|
7 |
Feb 23rd |
Class Discussion Improving Home Environments for Older
Adults Matteo Zallio, M.Arch, PhD
|
|
|
|
Feb 25th |
Class Discussion Virtual Assistive Technology Faire Various
Vendors
|
|
|
8 |
Mar 2nd |
Class Discussion Normalcy Fallacy: Reimagining Mobility for Scientific
Discovery & Innovation Kat M. Steele, PhD, MS
Designing Exoskeletons and Prosthetic Limbs that Enhance
Human Performance Steven H. Collins, PhD
|
|
|
|
Mar 4th |
Class Discussion Virtual Field Trip to the Magical Bridge
Playground Olenka Villarreal
Virtual Field Trip to the VA Palo Alto Health Care
System Graham H. Creasey, MD, FRCSEd & Shawna Hill, CTRS, RYT;
Jessica A. Radmilovic, CTRS; and Huy B. Diep
|
|
|
9 |
Mar 9th |
Class Discussion Machine Learning, Biosensing, Virtual Reality Technology
- Converging to Transform Healthcare Walter Greenleaf,
PhD
|
|
|
|
Mar 11th |
Class Discussion Wheelchair Fabrication in Developing
Countries Ralf Hotchkiss
|
|
|
10 |
Mar 16th |
Student Project Final
Presentations
|
|
This is a required class
session for students working on projects |
|
Mar 18th |
Student Project Final Presentations
|
|
This is a required class
session for students working on projects Project Final Reports and End-Quarter
Reflection due
Thursday, March 18th |
11 |
Mar 23rd |
Final exam week - no
class |
|
|
|