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Assistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) selected for One Day. One KU Assistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) is one of three KU Life Span Institute programs selected to participate in the upcoming One Day. One KU all university 24- hour giving campaign on February 20, 2019. Help Kansans with disabilities to be independent. The Assistive Technology for Kansans program helps citizens test adaptive technologies before buying them, to determine what will work best before investing in equipment. To provide individuals with disabilities with options for personal and home safety, ATK staff will create two home automation demonstration centers. These centers will show how security features can help individuals with disabilities live independently in their homes. A gift to ATK will be used to purchase home automation equipment that, for example, can alert people that visitors are approaching the home, systems that help control actions inside 1 The Insider ~ January 2019

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Page 1: The Insider - January 2019 - parsonslsi.drupal.ku.edu€¦  · Web viewThe Assistive Technology for Kansans program helps citizens test adaptive technologies before buying them,

Assistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) selected for One Day. One KU Assistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) is

one of three KU Life Span Institute programs selected to participate in the upcoming One Day. One KU all university 24-hour giving campaign on February 20, 2019.

Help Kansans with disabilities to be independent. The Assistive Technology for Kansans program helps citizens test adaptive technologies before buying them, to determine what will work best before investing in equipment. To provide individuals with disabilities with options for personal and home safety, ATK staff will create two home automation demonstration centers. These centers will show how security features can help individuals with disabilities live independently in their homes. 

A gift to ATK will be used to purchase home automation equipment that, for example, can alert people that visitors are approaching the home, systems that help control actions inside the house, as well as, health monitoring options. The ATK home automation 

demonstration center will highlight a variety of home control actions such as changing the temperature, raising or lowering the blinds, using the TV, phone, or computer. Stable health is a big factor in living at home and health monitoring systems will be available to “try before you buy.” Assistive technology specialists available statewide with offices at five regional AT Access Sites will help individuals identify needs, demonstrate a range of options to meet these needs, as well as 

Continued on page 2

In this issue:

1…ATK selected for One Day. One KU

3…New Staff Welcomed: Mallory Nolting

1The Insider ~ January 2019

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3…Project News: SEKRS website redo

3…Presentations

4…Project Highlights: ATK-KEE Reuse 

5…Just the Facts: Voice Assistants

6…Former Staff News: Kate Saunders

2The Insider ~ January 2019

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Continued from page 1.assistance in identifying funding opportunities. 

ATK programs are guided by an advisory council of state policymakers and individuals who use assistive technology. Their experiences and input are valuable in making the home automation demonstration centers reflect the needs of Kansans. 

Consider supporting Assistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) on February 20. To learn more about the scope and activities of the ATK program, visit our website at www.atk.ku.edu   .   

Two additional LSI programs participating in One Day. One KU are:

Pave the way for academic success in infancy. Increasing the interactive talk between very young children and their caregivers is a key factor in early brain and behavioral development, and it has been shown to contribute directly to academic achievement and success in school and beyond. Through the PC Talk program, researchers at the Juniper Gardens Children's Project help parents and caregivers learn and become proficient at using 

communication strategies in their daily routines to increase language learning opportunities that infants and young children have at home and in child care. Gifts for this project will support development of a suite of online videos in English and Spanish and an app to help teach these strategies to parents and caregivers.

Foster healthy child development in area Native American communities. Speech-language pathologist Joshuaa Allison-Burbank and KU graduate students work with Native American families living in rural and urban Kansas communities to identify the needs of parents and unite them with resources. Among the topics addressed at these child development summits held in Kansas tribal communities are developmental disabilities, speech delay or hearing problems, early intervention options, and identifying parenting strategies to address behavior issues. Help expand this program to serve 150 families through three summits in northeast Kansas. 

To participate in the 2019 One Day. One KU giving event, see instructions below. 

How to participate: Contributions made between 12 a.m. and 11:59 p.m. CST on February 20, 2019 will count toward ONE DAY. ONE KU totals. Please browse the One Day. One KU site to learn about the different opportunities and consider supporting the programs and priorities most meaningful to you. The main One Day. One KU webpage is https://kansas.scalefunder.com/gday/giving-day/10157   .  

Become a One Day. One KU Ambassador: Help spread the word and encourage others to give. For more information go to https://kansas.scalefunder.com/gday/giving-day/10157/signup 

How to find the Life Span Institute information page for One Day. One KU: Start on the One Day. One KU homepage, select Research and Innovation, then scroll to the bottom of the page to find Life Span Institute. The shortcut is https://kansas.scalefunder.com/gday/giving-day/10157/department/11813   .   

3The Insider ~ January 2019

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WELCOME! SEKRS New StaffMallory Nolting hails from Parsons, has lived here her whole life, and likes it. So when she started looking for an accounting position that would meet her goal of an interesting and fulfilling “numbers” job, she knew she wanted something close to home. Timing is everything. It turns out that a position posted this fall, just ahead of Mallory’s May 2019 Pittsburg State University graduation ceremony (Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration with a Major in Accounting) fit her requirements perfectly. She started with Southeast Kansas Respite Services (SEKRS) on December 17, and from all reports she made a great decision.

Diane Salyers, SEKRS Coordinator, said, “With Mallory’s expertise and by upgrading this position to full time, I am looking forward to adding some additional Medicaid services for families that we have previously been unable to provide.”

Beyond her new work schedule, Mallory has two brothers, two dogs, and is certain that, while home base is Parsons, travel is definitely in her future. 

Other SEKRS NewsDiane Salyers, SEKRS Coordinator, announced the SEKRS (Southeast Kansas Respite Services) website has been reorganized and updated. A big change is the Employment page that offers the range of forms and applications necessary for employment with SEKRS. Visit the SEKRS website at www.sekrespiteservices.org. 

PresentationsHolmes, Sarah. (2018, November 13). Interaction techniques and teaching strategies to support

classroom routines and schedules. Presentation at Olathe, KS.Holmes, Sarah. (2018, November 15). An introduction to the ASQ:SE-2. Presentation at Olathe, KS.Newton, Janet. (2018, November 10). An introduction to the ASQ 3. Training at Hutchinson, KS.Newton, Janet. (2018, November 10). An introduction to the ASQ SE 2. Training at Hutchinson, KS.Nippert, A. (2018, November 13). Great gift ideas to foster learning & creativity. Presentation at 

Manhattan, KS.Nippert, A. (2018, November 17). Emotional literacy. Presentation at Hoxie, KS.Nippert, A. (2018, November 17). Academic AND play-based: Building cognitive skills through play. 

Presentation at Hoxie, KS.Nippert, A. (2018, November 19). Partnering with ITSN to promote early childhood mental health. 

Presentation to High Plains Mental Health case workers.Nippert, A. (2018, December 11). Routines & schedules on vacation: Supporting your child through the

holidays. Presentation to KSU/CCD Parent Lunch & Learn, Manhattan, KS.Rinkel, Phoebe. (2018, November 3). An introduction to the Ages & Stages Questionnaire 3rd Edition

(ASQ-3). Presentation at Kansas City, KS.Rinkel, Phoebe. (2018, October, 17). Mindfulness: A resilience practice. Presentation at Leavenworth, 

KS.Rinkel, Phoebe. (2019, January 5). Introduction to the ASQ:SE2. Training at Kansas City, KS.

4The Insider ~ January 2019

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KEE Reuse Holds DME Donation DrivesAssistive Technology for Kansans (ATK) KEE Reuse Program, AT Access Sites and AT Specialists along with their regional partners: 

hosted 8 durable medical equipment donation drives, 

resulting in durable medical equipment donations of more than 119 items, and 

valued at more than $100,000.  Donated items included power wheelchairs, 

scooters, electric home care beds, shower chairs, and more.

The KEE Reuse Program accepts practically new, lightly used durable medical equipment from across Kansas. Five regional AT Access Sites are located in Oakley, Salina, Topeka, Wichita, Parsons, and a KEE affiliate office is in Garden City. ATK staff met in Salina for the December quarterly meeting to share their success stories. An important component of the 

KEE Reuse program is that the donated equipment is sanitized and refurbished and then given to Kansans who need it. 

All Kansans, with a disability or health condition, of any age or background, are eligible for AT experts to assist in determining the best AT that a person wants and needs. ATK Specialists help children and adults determine what AT best supports a more independent lifestyle at school, at work, and at home. Demonstrations of several items selected to meet the identified need are provided in the person’s home or at a regional office. Devices are available for short-term loan. When the person determines what suits their needs, staff will help them apply for funding. AT Specialists are expert at putting together funding from public and private entities, including opportunities for low-interest loans, and leveraging personal funds and family gifts.

For more information about the services available, please visit the ATK website at www.atk.ku.edu. 

5The Insider ~ January 2019

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Just the FACTSVoice Assistants: Talk to me!Do you remember the first time an electronic device responded to a question you asked? Many of us remember the first generation of GPS devices for our vehicles and if you lived “off the beaten path” 

you too may have heard the mechanical voice say, “Stop, turn around” and had a good laugh. With current technology named Siri, Alexa, and the imaginative Google’s Assistant the opportunity for a two-way conversation is powerful. Ask for the weather forecast, ask to make a phone call, ask to order pizza and it seems to work like magic. Imagine though if Alexa doesn’t understand your speech pattern, recognize your words, and what excites others turns out to be a heartbreaker for you. Read on.

Why voice assistants don’t understand people who stutterBy Kevin Wheeler (2018) Illustrations by Leonard Peng 

When Apple released Siri in 2011, Marc Winski was excited. Here was a new way to play songs, make phone calls, and save time. All one needed to do was say the magic words: “Hey Siri, do this...” Winski didn’t expect his stutter to defeat the time-saving purpose of this technology.

But it did. “As soon as you pause or stop over a word, [Siri] stops listening,” said Winski, an actor living in Manhattan. “Something that was created to save time has created more stress.”

While these interactions are frustrating for Winski and the roughly 3 million people in the United States who stutter, voice assistants and voice recognition technology are here to stay. Whether it’s relaying your name to a non-human operator or telling Google to turn up the lights in your home, we’re talking to more robots—but the technology is leaving people who stutter behind.

Speech-recognition software   … Read the entire article here.      

Online url for Kevin Wheeler’s article:  https://www.curbed.com/2018/12/12/18135195/alexa-google-home-tech-stuttering

Kansas Relay News

Sara Sack, Director, Assistive Technology for Kansans, reports that the Kansas Corporation Commission has selected Sprint to provide Telecommunications Relay Service and Captioned Telephone Service to the state of Kansas, effective January 1, 2019. Dr. Sack directs the Kansas Telecommunications Access Program and the Kansas Relay. An essential service that Kansas Relay makes available is access to Communications Assistants (CA) to facilitate phone calls 

as needed, 24/7. People with a speech disability such as stuttering, or those who use a (Continued on page 6)

6The Insider ~ January 2019

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From page 5.voice synthesizer, can use their own voice on a Speech-to-Speech (STS)relay call. The CA is specially trained to understand unique speech patterns and repeats the words exactly as they are spoken to their caller. The STS service is described in detail at http://www.kansasrelay.com/speech-disability-service/speech-to-speech/  For more information on Kansas Relay or to apply for free telecommunications equipment, visit the ATK Kansas Relay webpage, http://atk.ku.edu/relay or call 800-526-3648.

Former LSI at Parsons Scientist RecognizedKate Saunders Receives 2019 Distinguished Contributions Award

The experimental analysis of human behavior special interest group, of the 

association for behavior analysis international, has awarded Kate Saunders its 2019 Distinguished Contributions Award. The award is given every year to an individual who has made substantial, long-term contributions to the Experimental Analysis of Human Behavior. Kate’s contributions will be honored at the May 2019 ABAI convention in Chicago.

Kate is only the fourth winner of the award in the “Current generation.” Most former recipients are in their 80s. These include some local favorites––our very own former Parsons’ researcher, Joe Spradlin, and Travis Thompson, who held a position at the KU medical center. 

Kate is among a handful who publishes in both JABA and JEAB. Much of the work that led to Kate’s receiving this award was done at the KU Life Span Institute at Parsons. This includes both basic and applied work on relational learning (e.g., learning that two stimuli “go together”, such as a word and a specific object). Although the main body of this work was done two decades ago, it is currently achieving “classic” status given relevance to teaching children with autism. The three primary studies, with co-author Joe Spradlin, have together received over 500 citations. More recent work is on the development of a computerized instructional sequence to teaching phonemic awareness and the alphabetic principle—key contributors to success in reading instruction. This work applies relational-learning techniques to teaching and assessing phonemic awareness and the alphabetic principle in children with intellectual disabilities and/or poor speech intelligibility. One R01 has been completed, and efforts for continued funding are underway. 

The Insider is archived online at http://www.parsons.lsi.ku.edu/newsletters

The University of Kansas prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, national origin, age, ancestry, disability, status as a veteran, sexual orientation, marital status, parental status, gender identity, gender expression and genetic information in the University’s programs and activities.  The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding the non-discrimination policies: Director of the Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access, [email protected], 1246 W. Campus Road, Room 153A, Lawrence, KS, 66045, (785) 864-6414, 711 TTY.

7The Insider ~ January 2019