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Teaching AT  
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Overview
 

Module Objectives

Present several approaches to defining assistive technology (AT) -- its distinctions and boundaries -- as well as an inclusive definition and several refinements.

Examine the distinction between assistive and therapeutic technologies.

Discuss the relationship between AT and independence which leads to a common theme related to reliance on devices.

Focus on "universal design" and the "Twelve Essentials" of AT.

Definitions

Assistive technology … well first of all, what is it? Sounds like a tautology, doesn’t it (something redundantly true, or true by definition – like beautiful beauty)?

Technology, at least the kind that’s meant to be used by people, directly, is designed to help in some way, to reduce our effort or make some task come out better, right? So it’s assistive, or at least purported to be, by definition. If it weren’t, why is someone making and selling it, and someone else buying it? But we’ll put this picky complaint aside for the time being. After all, terminology evolves and takes on meaning and connotation beyond the literal logic (or illogic) of the words.

So a simple non-judgmental definition of Assistive Technology (AT, typically capitalized, perhaps to distinguish it from the word “at”) is the class of products that enable or support or enhance some aspect of function or performance of some activity for persons with disabilities.

Notice that “selection of Assistive Technology is driven by an individual’s functional needs, not by her/his disability category.1

Attendees at meetings of RESNA (the Rehabilitation Engineering Society of North America) or the ASA (American Society on Aging) or the Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation or any of a long list of consumer, provider, and/or academic societies involved in using, delivering and improving rehabilitation services and promoting independent living will hear AT used in this way quite consistently.

“The primary goal of Assistive Technology is the enhancement of capabilities and the removal of barriers to performance.”2

This is the standard working definition.


References

1 The Arkansas Tech Act Project (ATAP), Guiding Principle 4 as synthesized by Joy Zabala.
2 Ibid.

 
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This curriculum was funded by grant #H 133B001200 from the National Institute of Disability and Research, U.S. Department of Education
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