Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 57(4)

A quarterly newsletter from the Council for Exceptional Children's Division on Visual Impairments containing practitioner tips for Teachers of Students with Visual Impairments, Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and other professionals.

Issue link: http://dvi.uberflip.com/i/196203

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dependence, is no longer confined to sitting in the front row or tethered to a power outlet, uses universally-designed and common classroom technologies, and does not look different from sighted peers. Too Good to be True? As with all technology, certain prerequisites need to be in place to support such a system of access. How the student can screen share depends on the availability of wireless connectivity in the school and the technological capabilities of the classroom teacher. In a class where the majority of students bring their own devices, screensharing can even heighten the learning experience of the whole class by allowing the teacher to check for everyone's understanding as the lesson progresses. Here are some approaches that serve the same purpose of desktop access to materials presented "on the board." What you choose to implement will depend on the existing supports. Real-time screen sharing: Join.Me, TeamViewer, NetClick These tools rely on wireless internet in the classroom (wi-fi). They are free to use, and work on any PC, Apple computer, or tablet (such as an iPad). The teacher and student install the program on their respective devices, and either click to "share the screen" (start a presentation), or "join" (view someone else's screen). When the teacher initiates the screen share, an access code is generated. Anyone with this code can then access the screen, and follow along the lesson as it happens. Join.Me and TeamViewer are particularly useful when teachers use a SmartBoard. Join.Me has the most user-friendly interface. TeamViewer allows teachers to give control of the screen to any participant if they want student participation. NetClick differs because it is limited to PowerPoint presentations, but it allows 21

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