Design, Technology , and Engineering benefitting individuals
with disabilities and older adults in the local community |
Newsletter - March 4,
2024 |
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Perspectives is the newsletter of the
Stanford course, Perspectives in Assistive Technology.
Week 9 Class Sessions
This newsletter issue describes Week 9's
class sessions.
Perspectives in Assistive
Technology is a Winter Quarter Stanford course - now entering its
eighteenth 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; a
tour of an accessible inclusive playground; student project
presentations and demonstrations; and an Assistive Technology Faire.
Check out the course website. |
Week 9
Course News
Guest Lecturer
Schedule - The schedule of guest lecturers has been finalized. For
more information about each presenter and their topic, browse to the course
lecture schedule webpage. Community members are
welcome to attend class sessions on campus. Maps and direcrions. Masking is not required.
There will not be a concurrent Zoom broadcast. |
Week 9 Class
Sessions
Tuesday, March 5th at 4:30pm PST
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I Didn't See You
There - Film Screening Reid
Davenport Filmmaker |
Abstract: As a visibly disabled person, filmmaker
Reid Davenport sets out to make a film about how he sees the world, from either
his wheelchair or his two feet, without having to be seen himself. The
unexpected arrival of a circus tent outside his apartment in Oakland, CA leads
him to consider the history and legacy of PT Barnums Freak Show and its
lingering presence in his daily life in the form of gawking, lack of access,
and other forms of ableism. Informed by his position in space, lower to the
ground, Davenport captures indelible images, often abstracted into shapes and
patterns separate from their meaning. But the circus tent looms in the
background, and is reverberated by tangible on-screen interruptions, from
unsolicited offers of help to careless blocking of ramps.
Film Description: Personal and unflinching, I
Didn't See You There forces the viewer to confront the spectacle and
invisibility of disability. Offering both a perspective and stylistic approach
that are rarely seen, Reid brings an urgently needed storytelling eye to
filmmaking with a documentary that is powerful and emotional, thoughtful and
raw, intimate and political. |
Thursday, March 7th at 4:30pm
PST
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Wheelchair Fabrication
in Developing Countries Ralf
Hotchkiss Whirlwind Wheelchair
International |
Abstract: Ralf Hotchkiss will track the design of
the Whirlwind Wheelchair from its beginning thirty years ago to the present and
on into the future. From the first design breakthroughs of barefoot blacksmiths
to the high tech testing and manufacturing methods of today, surprise
breakthroughs in basic wheelchair design have come from the backyard inventors
of some forty developing countries. These inventors form the Whirlwind Network
of wheelchair riders and designers. Their goal is not only to make wheelchairs
available in the poorest of countries; it is to radically improve the
durability and rough-ground mobility so that wheelchair riders can live and
work in environments that they can only dream of visiting today. Ralf will show
unfinished designs that open wide opportunities for new developments and he
will make a plea for the innovative designers of Stanford to enter into one of
today's most fulfilling areas of invention and international development work.
Joining Ralf will be Telma Ramos, a wheelchair builder from Nicaragua, who will
show simplified, more efficient fabrication of Whirlwind Wheelchair's latest
designs.
Biosketch: Ralf Hotchkiss is an inventor
and the lead designer of Whirlwind
Wheelchair International, a non-profit company located in Berkeley. Its
mission is "to make it possible for every person in the developing world who
needs a wheelchair to obtain one that will lead to maximum personal
independence and integration into society". At SFSU, he taught "Wheelchair
Design and Construction", a course in which students built a complete
wheelchair in a Third World appropriate shop. Ralf is a graduate of Oberlin
College (Physics) and a
1989
MacArthur Foundation Fellow. |
Upcoming In-person Class Sessions
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
To unsubscribe from this newsletter, please email
Dave. |
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