Design, Technology , and Engineering benefitting individuals
with disabilities and older adults in the local community |
July 28, 2021 |
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Perspectives is the newsletter of the
Stanford course, Perspectives in Assistive Technology.
Latest Summer Update
This newsletter issue further describes plans for the coming
year.
Perspectives in Assistive
Technology is a Winter Quarter Stanford course - entering its
sixteenth year - that explores the design, development, and use of
assistive technology that benefits people with disabilities and older adults.
It consists of semi-weekly in-person discussions; lectures by
notable professionals, clinicians, and assistive technology users; tours
of a local medical center and an accessible inclusive playground; student
project presentations and demonstrations; and an Assistive Technology
Faire. |
Latest Summer
Update
Greetings, members of the Stanford's Assistive
Technology course community,
With this issue, I'll continue to present plans for this
coming academic year's course.
Plans for next year's
course
Important dates
- Monday, September
20th - First day of Fall Quarter classes
- Wednesday, December
1st - Winter Quarter enrollment opens
- Tuesday, January
4th - First class session of Perspectives in Assistive
Technology
Community attendance - Community members are
welcome to attend, but will have to
attest to being
vaccinated or receiving a negative COVID test result. Masking during class
sessions may be required for everybody.
Movie night - The Oscar nominated Crip Camp has
been selected for screening on movie night. The date for the event has not been
chosen. View the trailer
(2:40).
Guest Lecturers - I have begun contacting past
guest lecturers about their availability as well as considering new presenters.
Sha Yao, now employed at
Google, has confirmed her participation and
Professor Krishna
V. Shenoy, PhD has accepted my invitation to speak about his Brain-Computer
Interface research. |
Request for student project
suggestions - Project suggestions are continuing to be
solicited.
You are strongly encouraged to submit project
suggestions for students to pursue. These suggestions must address a real
challenge experienced by an individual with a disability or older adult who
lives in the local community that is not adequately served by existing
commercial products. (Perform an internet search to verify this.) Identify and
describe the challenge rather than imagining a solution. Please do this as soon
as possible so I'll have adequate time to consider all submissions, edit
approved entries, and post them. The deadline is Wednesday, December
1st. If I accept your project suggestion, you will be invited to
"pitch" it to the class on Thursday, January
6th. If a student team selects it, you will have the opportunity to offer
your advice, direction, and expertise in person, by phone, and/or by email. For
more information refer to the Call for Projects
Suggestions and Project
Requirements webpages.
This course
relies on community involvement, so please suggest a project based upon an
identified problem or challenge. |
Examples of unsuitable project
suggestions - To further aid the project solicitation process, here
are examples of unsuitable project suggestions and explanations of of why they
are not appropriate. Many of these examples are drawn from real submitted
suggestions. I hope that the list will guide your thinking.
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User Project Suggestion - I need a new part
for my wheelchair, but the company charges too much money for it. I am sure
students can build a new one less expensively.
Project Suitability Analysis - Copying an
existing part does not exercise students' creative design skills. Fabricating a
ready-to-be-manufactured, lower cost version of an existing product is not a
suitable project goal as a student team's final prototype is a very long way
from a potential commercial product and parts typically represent a fraction of
a product's retail price.
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User Project Suggestion - I suggest students
build me a wheelchair that is super strong, very lightweight, and
inexpensive.
Project Suitability Analysis - This project
suggestion is over specified as all of the design criteria can not be met and
as such is unachievable. In addition, there is insufficient space on campus to
work on large items such as wheelchairs.
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User Project Suggestion - My challenge is
getting into my car. I am imagining a seat that rotates out to receive me and
then rotates into position for driving.
Project Suitability Analysis - Car seats that
rotate are available commercially. Students can not work on projects that
involve modifying a user's car or their home.
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User Project Suggestion - It would be great if
I could wirelessly call for an elevator located in a campus building, instead
of having to press the button.
Project Suitability Analysis - Students are
forbidden from working on projects that modify a campus building or the
infrastructure in general.
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User Project Suggestion - I care for a family
member who is severely obese. Is anti-gravity close to becoming a
reality?
Project Suitability Analysis - Projects' aims and
specifications should be realistic. Project solutions that can only be achieved
by employing magic, violating the laws of physics, defying gravity, creating a
perpetual motion machine, employing materials or technology that do not exist,
or disrupting the space-time continuum are examples of infeasible
projects.
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User Project Suggestion - My older adult uncle
who lives in Sacramento is challenged by meal preparation tasks.
Project Suitability Analysis - An older adult, a
person with a disability, a family member of a person with a disability, or a
health care professional must be available locally (within 25 miles) to work
with the student project team to further illustrate the problem, offer advice
during the quarter, and test the students' prototypes. Existing products that
address meal preparation tasks are available.
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User Project Suggestion - I have detailed
plans for a new assistive technology device. I would like a student team to
build it for me.
Project Suitability Analysis - Student teams'
projects must not be physical representation of another's design concept.
Fabricating a prototype from an existing design drawing does not exercise
students' creative design skills.
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User Project Suggestion - Can students add a
new access feature to my smartphone?
Project Suitability Analysis - Project solutions
must not require access to or modification of proprietary software, such as
adding functions to a cellphone.
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User Project Suggestion - My older adult
mother could benefit from a device that helps her get into and out of the
bathtub.
Project Suitability Analysis - There are many
existing products that could provide a safe solution. Project prototypes must
not pose any risk of harm to the user or student team.
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User Project Suggestion - My assistive
technology business needs an accessible website.
Project Suitability Analysis - Website design,
development, or modification are not suitable project tasks.
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User Project Suggestion - I have a startup
assistive technology company, but I can't afford to pay engineers to develop my
first product. Can I have a few students work on a project for my company in
its lab space in San Jose?
Project Suitability Analysis - It is not
appropriate for students to be low-cost or free labor for a commercial company.
Students must pursue their projects on campus.
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Please contact me with your ideas, questions, comments,
and project suggestions - or just to say hello. Please continue to stay safe
& healthy.
Dave Jaffe - Course Instructor
Let me know if you wish to be removed from this
list.
To unsubscribe from this newsletter, please email
Dave. |
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