- Central Intermediate Unit 10
- Assistive Technology
Special Education
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The Central Intermediate Unit Assistive Technology (AT) Program provides training and technical assistance to educational agencies serving students with disabilities from birth to age 21. Custom training for AT hardware and software is available as requested. Consultations are provided to IEP teams within the CIU 10 region to support students in their customary environments.Assistive Technology Devices: Any item, piece of equipment, or product system, whether acquired commercially, modified or customized, that is used to increase, maintain, or improve functional capabilities of individuals with disabilities.Assistive Technology Services: Any services that directly assist an individual with a disability in the selection, acquisition, or use of an assistive technology device.
Services Available
- Consultation
- SETT Framework Facilitation
- Professional Development Trainings
- Equipment Loan
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Assistive Technology Round Table Event with Special Guests: Mike Marotta and Darlette Navrotski
Assistive Technology Roundtable
If interested in attending, please click the registration link below:
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Pennsylvania's Initiative on Assistive Technology (PIAT)
Pennsylvania’s Initiative on Assistive Technology (PIAT) strives to enhance the lives of all Pennsylvanians with disabilities, older Pennsylvanians, and their families, through access to and acquisition of assistive technology devices and services, which allow for choice, control, and independence at home, work, school, play, and in their neighborhoods.
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Georgia Project for Assistive Technology (GPAT)
The Georgia Project for Assistive Technology (GPAT), a unit of the Georgia Department of Education, supports local school systems in their efforts to provide assistive technology devices and services to students with disabilities.
Funded since 1991, GPAT has focused on building local assistive technology resources by providing quality professional learning and technical support services.
The mission of GPAT is to improve student achievement, productivity, independence, and inclusion by enhancing educator knowledge of assistive technology and increasing student access to appropriate assistive technology devices and services.
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University of Kentucky Assistive Technology (UKAT) Toolkit
The University of Kentucky Assistive Technology (UKAT) Toolkit is a product of six years of assistive technology (AT) research conducted at the University of Kentucky in collaboration with six school districts in Kentucky. It provides a systematic method of delivering AT services to students in schools. It is based on two major premises:
The first goal in special education is to improve a student’s ability to successfully function in schools, responding to the demands presented by the general curriculum and school environment; and
No technology and low technology solutions should be considered before the high-technology solutions.
The Toolkit systematically guides IEP and AT teams in considering the use of AT from referral through implementation. -
Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative (WATI)
WATI was funded by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction through IDEA discretionary grant number 9906-23. From 1992-2009.
It currently is a volunteer network of assistive (AT) consultants from across the state who continue the work of providing AT training and support within Wisconsin educational settings. -
Penn State AAC-RERC
The AAC-RERC is a Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center that functions as a collaborative research group dedicated to the development of effective AAC technology. Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) refers to ways (other than speech) that are used to send a message from one person to another. Free webcasts are available on their site.
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PaTTAN Assistive Technology
Pennsylvania has a network of 29 Intermediate Units that serve the school districts in regions across the state. Each Intermediate Unit has at least one member of their TaC (Training and Consultation) Team with knowledge in Assistive Technology, who provides services for the students with disabilities in the districts in that area. Although the cost for equipment is the responsibility of each district for students with I.E.P.s, alternative funding may be available from other resources.
Assessment is an ongoing process; therefore, equipment that is needed for assessment and trial can be borrowed using the PaTTAN (Pennsylvania Training and Technical Assistance Network) short-term loan program. This program provides LEAs with devices to assess the assistive technology needs of students with disabilities. The AT kit categories include: augmentative and alternative communication, blindness/visual impairment, computer access, deaf/hard of hearing/deaf-blind, switch access/environmental access, and technology for print/reading/writing support.For more information about PaTTAN, please visit their website.
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Penn State AAC & Literacy
This Penn State AAC & Literacy website provides guidelines for teaching literacy skills to learners with special needs, especially learners with complex communication needs.
Autism spectrum disorders
Cerebral palsy
Down syndrome
Developmental apraxia
Multiple disabilitiesThe website provides information on:
What skills to teach
How to teach these skills
Videotaped examples of instruction with learners with special needs. -
Quality Indicators of Assistive Technology
The mission of Quality Indicators of Assistive Technology (QIAT) is to guide the provision of quality AT services to improve
educational achievement of students with disabilities.
QIAT activities for the improvement of assistive technology services include:
• Developing descriptive indicators of effective practices
• Developing tools to evaluate services for continuous improvement
• Creating resources to guide planning and implementation
• Identifying and sharing information and resources
• Providing opportunities for communication and collaboration
The descriptors of effective assistive technology practices were created to help school districts evaluate and improve or develop their services. They consist of specific indicators, which are descriptive statements, descriptions of common errors that may occur, and self-evaluation matrices. -
Accessible Educational Materials (AEM)