Design, Technology , and Engineering benefitting individuals
with disabilities and older adults in the local community |
January 13, 2025 |
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Perspectives is the newsletter of the
Stanford course, Perspectives in Assistive Technology.
Course Enrollment Update Week 2 Class Sessions &
Assistive Technology Faire
This newsletter issue describes Week 2
class sessions.
Perspectives in Assistive
Technology is a Winter Quarter Stanford course - entering its
nineteenth 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.
Students pursue team-based projects that address real challenges faced by
people with disabilities and older adults living in the local community. Check
out the course
website. |
Week 2
Course News
Student Enrollment -
The student enrollment has 33 working on team projects, 3 working on individual
projects and 2 attending class sessions without participating on a project.
There will be 9 teams consisting of 3 or 4 students. There are no students on a
Wait List |
Call for Stanford Students and
Faculty with a Disability - Students and faculty are invited to
participate in a
panel
discussion in the Week 3 class session on Tuesday, January 21st.
Several students have already agreed to talk about their disabilities, the
challenges they have faced, why they chose to attend Stanford, their academic
and career goals, and the assistive technology they employ to be successful
students. Please let me know if you are interested in joining the
panel. |
Week 2 In-person Class
Sessions
Tuesday, January 14th at
4:30pm PST
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Creating Assistive
Technologies - Understanding the Problem Gayle Curtis, MS UX Design
Consultant |
Abstract: When we look at the drivers of
effective innovation, we see two complementary themes emerging: First, new
technologies or methods that open the way to new solutions, and second, new
insights or experiences that yield a better understanding of the problem. With
a design thinking approach, we begin by building empathy with the user and the
situation, then we use ideation, prototyping, and iteration to explore,
formulate, and test solutions.
In this class session we will look at ways to gain
understanding of user needs, goals, and values around a problem, as well as the
constraints and requirements of the situations around them. One goal for this
session is for students to identify a set of questions to explore through
interview and observation with real users of assistive technologies. Teams may
also get some good ideas about the people they might approach for both
inspiration and insight.
Biosketch: Gayle Curtis is a UX design
consultant in the San Francisco Bay Area, specializing in user interface
architecture and design strategy for online ventures and interactive products.
Recently he was Principal Interaction Designer at Yahoo!, where he also
developed a practice area in strategic ideation and disseminated it through
workshops in the US and Asia. At Stanford he has held Lecturer appointments in
Human Computer Interaction (CS) and Product Design (ME). Gayle is a graduate of
the MS Engineering Product Design Program at Stanford. |
Thursday, January 16th at
4:30pm PST
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Bridging the Gap between
Consumers and Products in Rehabilitation Medicine
Deborah E. Kenney, MS, OTR/L
Stanford University, VA Palo Alto Health Care
System, and Foothill College |
Abstract: Occupational therapists (OTs) are
critical players in the transdisciplinary rehabilitation team. An OT's job is
to help people, who because of illness, injury, or aging, have experienced a
decrease in their ability to function independently in the areas of daily
living, work, play, and leisure. Treatment by an OT often includes the
prescription of assistive technology. This talk will focus on the aspects
necessary to effectively fit the technology to the individual and support the
use of this technology in the home environment, and the impediments to
providing this. She will be joined by a panel of stroke survivors: Albert A.
and Michael W. who will discuss their challenges and the assistive technology
devices they have used.
Biosketch: Deborah Kenney has been an
occupational therapist working with stroke survivors and hand patients for the
last 29 years. She currently splits her time, as a researcher, between Stanford
and the VA Palo Alto Health Care
System. She has collaborated on numerous design / development research
projects with both engineers as well as with graduate, medical, and
undergraduate students. Her work includes testing and integrating technology
into the rehabilitation setting with individuals with Parkinson's Disease, CVA
(stroke), spinal cord injury, hand and orthopedic surgery and rehabilitation,
and balance problems related to aging. Ms. Kenney currently works with
researching problems of hand rehabilitation and treatment related to post
surgical pain and thumb arthritis and continues to develop novel treatments for
post-stroke survivors privately in the community. |
Upcoming In-person Class Sessions
Assistive Technology Faire - Call for
Vendors
Product manufactuers and
service providers are invited to participate in the Assistive Technology
Faire - This twelfth annual course event is scheduled for
Thursday, February 20th and will provide an opportunity for students and
community members to get an up-close look at a variety of assistive technology
devices and learn about available services. Users of assistive technology
products as well as small companies and agencies serving
individuals with disabilities and older adults are encouraged to join in on
this event. Browse to the Call for Assistive Technology
Faire Participants webpage for more information and contact me to
register.
Everyone is welcome to attend this event. Here is the
current line up and the
webpage of last year's
Faire. |
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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