80,414 research outputs found
Initial Evaluation of Accessibility and Design Awareness with 3-D Immersive Environments
This paper describes an effort to build and evaluate the effectiveness of an immersive 3-D visualization system to help increase the awareness that students have when designing software that has a high level of accessibility for the differently abled. The demonstration utilizes an immersive virtual reality (VR) environment in which we simulated two types of colorblindness in a generally familiar environment. We report on the initial trial of this tool and the results of student surveys designed to assess impact on student perception and understanding and demonstrate that the use of virtual environments can give students greater empathy for individuals with visual impairments
Lightweight Formal Verification in Classroom Instruction of Reasoning about Functional Code
In college courses dealing with material that requires mathematical rigor, the adoption of a machine-readable representation for formal arguments can be advantageous. Students can focus on a specific collection of constructs that are represented consistently. Examples and counterexamples can be evaluated. Assignments can be assembled and checked with the help of an automated formal reasoning system. However, usability and accessibility do not have a high priority and are not addressed sufficiently well in the design of many existing machine-readable representations and corresponding formal reasoning systems. In earlier work [Lap09], we attempt to address this broad problem by proposing several specific design criteria organized around the notion of a natural context: the sphere of awareness a working human user maintains of the relevant constructs, arguments, experiences, and background materials necessary to accomplish the task at hand. We report on our attempt to evaluate our proposed design criteria by deploying within the classroom a lightweight formal verification system designed according to these criteria. The lightweight formal verification system was used within the instruction of a common application of formal reasoning: proving by induction formal propositions about functional code. We present all of the formal reasoning examples and assignments considered during this deployment, most of which are drawn directly from an introductory text on functional programming. We demonstrate how the design of the system improves the effectiveness and understandability of the examples, and how it aids in the instruction of basic formal reasoning techniques. We make brief remarks about the practical and administrative implications of the system’s design from the perspectives of the student, the instructor, and the grader
How are cities working in the Spanish territorial development? ( 1985-2000)
The economic regional convergence process has attracted much attention through the last decade by regional scientists. This paper tries to deep in this topic, taking into account as a unit of analysis the role that cities have in regional convergence. Sigma and beta convergence are measured following a method based on a production function of the main spanish cities( 124 cities bigger than 50.000 inhabitants.
Exploring the usage of a video application tool: Experiences in film studies
This paper explores our experiences in deploying a video application tool in film studies, and its evaluation in terms of realistic contextual end-users who have real tasks to perform in a real environment. We demonstrate our experiences and core lesson learnt in deploying our novel movie browser application with undergraduate and graduate students completing a Film Studies course in Dublin City University over a semester. We developed a system called MOVIEBROWSER2 that has two types of browsing modes: Advanced and Basic. In general, students found that the features we provided were beneficial for their studies. Some issues or mismatches arose during the trial. A ‘wish-list’ was drawn up that might be useful for the future system developer. The contribution and achievements reported in this article are on the demonstration and exploration of how advances in technology can be deployed, and media can be accessed in the context of a real user community. Exploring the usage indicates a positive acceptance among students, besides lessons learned that are important for further investigation
Include 2011 : The role of inclusive design in making social innovation happen.
Include is the biennial conference held at the RCA and hosted by the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design. The event is directed by Jo-Anne Bichard and attracts an international delegation
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Introducing TU100 ‘My Digital Life’: Ubiquitous computing in a distance learning environment
In this paper we describe the Open University’s progress towards delivering an introduction to ubiquitous computing within a distance-learning environment. Our work is strongly influenced by the philosophy of learning-through-play and we have taken technologies originally designed for children’s education and adapted them for adult learners, many of whom will have no formal experience of computer science or information technology.
We will introduce two novel technologies; Sense, a drag-and-drop programming language based on Scratch; and the SenseBoard, an inexpensive hardware device that can be connected to the student’s computer, through which they can sense their environment and display outputs.
This paper is not intended as a detailed discussion of individual technologies (they will follow in time), rather it should serve as an introduction to the Open University’s method of teaching and how we hope to continue to recruit new computer scientists and engineers using novel technologies
Creativity Training for Future Engineers: Preliminary Results from an Educative Experience
Due in part to the increased pace of cultural and environmental change, as
well as increased competition due to globalization, innovation is become one of
the primary concerns of the 21st century. We present an academic course
designed to develop cognitive abilities related to creativity within an
engineering education context, based on a conceptual framework rooted in
cognitive sciences. The course was held at \'Ecole Polytechnique de Montr\'eal
(\'EPM), a world renowned engineering school and a pillar in Canada's
engineering community. The course was offered twice in the 2014-2015 academic
year and more than 30 students from the graduate and undergraduate programs
participated. The course incorporated ten pedagogical strategies, including
serious games, an observation book, individual and group projects, etc., that
were expected to facilitate the development of cognitive abilities related to
creativity such as encoding, and associative analytical thinking. The CEDA
(Creative Engineering Design Assessment) test was used to measure the students'
creativity at the beginning and at the end of the course. Field notes were
taken after each of the 15 three-hour sessions to qualitatively document the
educative intervention along the semester and students gave anonymous written
feedback after completing the last session. Quantitative and qualitative
results suggest that an increase in creativity is possible to obtain with a
course designed to development cognitive abilities related to creativity. Also,
students appreciated the course, found it relevant, and made important,
meaningful learnings regarding the creative process, its cognitive mechanism
and the approaches available to increase it.Comment: 10 page
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