For the deaf and
hard-of-hearing,
talk isn't cheap… it's precious.
Realtime
Graduates to the
Classroom Conventions, and the WEB!
It
is a common assumption that a deaf
person can only communicate through
a sign language interpreter. That is
true for someone whose primary
language is ASL, American Sign
Language. It may be untrue, however,
for a late-deafened adult, an
individual who, due to illness or
degenerative disease or genetic
inheritance, became deaf after
living in the hearing world. This
individual does not necessarily use
ASL, may not read lips, but does
communicate orally.
What technology provides instant
access to the classroom and ensures
that individual full participation?
Realtime reporting at its finest
through our INSTANT WORDSsm service.
Realtime reporting is the conversion
of the spoken word from stenotype
shorthand simultaneously into
printed format using computer-aided
translation. [CAT]
CAT started as a government
experiment in the early '50s. The U.
S. Air Force and IBM embarked on an
experiment to translate foreign
languages into English. The idea of
inputting data into the computer
using a stenographic machine rather
than a standard QWERTY keyboard was
pursued as the fastest method to
accomplish this task. By the mid
'60s, the U. S. Government was
successful in computer translation
of Russian and Chinese into English,
but it was not until later that
decade that stenographic shorthand
outlines would translate into
English words.
In 1985, the court system started
experimenting with realtime as an
assistive device for
hearing-impaired litigants and
jurors. Through this process, live
closed-captioning of TV programs was
accomplished. In the '90s, realtime
saw its way into the college
classroom. With instant text
appearing on the computer screen
during class lectures, and verbatim
notes being provided through this
method, students with hearing
impairments found their grades were
markedly improved. Realtime in the
class also offered compliance with
certain accessibility requirements
under the ADA.
Now INSTANT
WORDSsm is being provided remotely
to college campuses. Receiving an
audio feed of the class, text is
instantly modemed back to the
student's computer screen in class.
Internet platforms and application
software are now being utilized as
well. For more information on
sources of realtime reporting
nationally, also known as CART,
visit the National Court Reporters
Association at
www.NCRAonline.org
EduCaption is proud to provide
students at Emory University and
other organizations with INSTANT
WORDSSM