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Design, Technology , and Engineering benefitting individuals with disabilities and older adults in the local community
January 17, 2021    
2 columns of images relating to assistive technology

Perspectives is the newsletter of the Stanford course,
Perspectives in Assistive Technology.

Creating Assistive Technologies

This issue announces the next class session
and encourages your participation in the course's Assistive Technology Faire.

Perspectives in Assistive Technology is a Winter Quarter Stanford course - entering its fifteenth year - that explores the design, development, and use of assistive technology that benefits people with disabilities and older adults. It consists of semi-weekly online discussions; lectures by notable professionals, clinicians, and assistive technology users; virtual tours of local medical, clinical, and engineering facilities; student project presentations and demonstrations; and a Virtual Assistive Technology Faire.

Course News

Two clip-art students

Course Statistics - As of today, 49 students have enrolled in the course, 10 vendors plan to participate in the Virtual Assistive Technology Faire, and options for student projects have been presented by six community members.

Next class session - Tuesday, January 19th at 4:30pm PST via Zoom

photo of Gayle


Creating Assistive Technologies - Understanding the Problem
Gayle Curtis
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 taught courses in Human-Computer Interactions (HCI) and Product Design. Gayle is a graduate of the MS Engineering Product Design Program at Stanford.

Zoom Attendance

Zoom logio

This class session will not be open to community attendance - This decision has been made subsequent to the loss of vocal quality during the first class session - mostly likely due to the large number of attendees. For this reason, I may have to restrict Zoom attendance to enrolled students. However, I will provide the link to this recorded video session to anyone who requests it.

Please note that each Zoom session url is different, so you can't use a previous url to connect to a future class session.

Upcoming class sessions:

Assistive Technology Faire

clip art of a faire

You are invited to participate in the Virtual Assistive Technology Faire - This ninth annual course event is scheduled for Thursday, February 25th 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 virtual event. Please browse to the Call for Assistive Technology Faire Participants webpage for more information and contact me to register. Each vendor will have 5 to 10 minutes of unopposed Zoom time to display, demonstrate, and discuss their assistive technology products or services. Everyone is welcome to attend the Faire. Ten vendors have signed up to participate so far.

Here is the line up and slides from last year's Faire.

Other

Email questions, comments, or suggestions - Please email me if you have general questions, comments, corncerns, or suggestions regarding the course. Thank you again for your interest.

Dave

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