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Cornell STEM Captioning May Reach High Schools

Cornell University is testing an online, remote captioning system for deaf and hard of hearing students, which may reach into the high school sector. The move is geared to encourage more deaf students to study STEM topics.

Read More: Cornell Supports Deaf Students In STEM Field

Market-size figures from the US value speech-recognition, captioning and transcribing solutions at USD 16 billion per year, with a 21% CAGR in the educational and corporate sectors. This technology is one to watch, with cloud-computing driving market growth.

In the US, over 30,000 students with hearing issues use daily technologies like the internet, instant messaging, SMS texts, mobile- and video-phones to access mainstream lectures and to improve their educational experiences.

Classroom Captions In The US, UK, Australia

Live captioning (also known as CART) extends this support by redirecting stenographers’ rapid, real-time typing skills to educational and workplace purposes. In 2011, Australia mandated that all severely and profoundly deaf students should have this support at their local, mainstream high schools.

The Sound Advice team believes Ireland, a small country with a robust tech-sector, can feasibly build an online, remote captioning network for use by students with hearing issues and by EFL students, who feed into the tourism sector.

With CAO figures showing science courses to be luring third-level students – and the multinational tech expertise available – the big question is whether Ireland can follow Australia and the US, in providing sustainable classroom captioning solutions.

 

Further Reading

  • * Australia To Take Classroom Captioning ‘National’
  • Communication Technology Solutions – By Design
  • TeachNet Blog: Closed Captions In The Classroom
  • Deaf Student Uses Captions In An Operating Theatre
  • Deaf Student Doctor Adds Perspective To Training
  • ‘Disability Law News’ Blog Cites Sound Advice’s Advocacy
Apr 24, 2012Team Sound Advice

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Comments: 2
  1. Aubrey
    13 years ago

    The Irish owned, Irish developed website www.seewritenow.ie, developed with our partners at PCR Ltd has been offering remote CART services (realtime captioning) to students in Ireland for some time now; and we have done this without any assistance, financial or otherwise, from any State or private source. Thanks for highlighting this invaluable service, and we’re proud of the fact that Irish developed products are at the forefront of technology in this sector.

    ReplyCancel
  2. CCAC
    13 years ago

    Great to read this, and we look forward to learning more about developments in Ireland, and via the Cornell (New York State, US) efforts. Captioning inclusion is vital for many, if not most students. Beyond providing access for anyone with deafness or hearing loss, captioning facilitates literacy and language learning too (if this is a goal). Cheers, Lauren for the CCAC (ccacaptioning.org)

    ReplyCancel

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13 years ago 4 Comments Captions, Education, Hearingaccess, accessibility, accessible, child, children, cochlear, communication, deaf, deafness, education, family, hearing, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, language, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, read, reading, school, schools, social, speech, student, students, support, teach, teacher, teaching, technology, verbal, visual, words239
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Sound Advice - formerly Irish Deaf Kids (IDK) - is an award-winning, for-impact venture geared to technology-supported mainstream education and living for deaf children and students.

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