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Input Technologies or “DigiTools” Revolution What it all means … www.SpeakingSolutions.com. Favorite Verbal Bloopers. Apocryphal: 1940s or 1950s, IBM Executive, “Only 1/2 dozen computers will be needed to handle all the processing needs for the entire world.”
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Input Technologies or “DigiTools” Revolution What it all means …www.SpeakingSolutions.com
Favorite Verbal Bloopers • Apocryphal: 1940s or 1950s, IBM Executive, “Only 1/2 dozen computers will be needed to handle all the processing needs for the entire world.” • Real: 1980s, District Technology Committee, “The IBM PC isn’t a real computer.” • Real: Early 1990s: A computer teacher vetoed our first Windows lab, "DOS will never go away. No self-respecting professional would ever wish to take her hands off the keyboard to use a mouse!”
Favorite Verbal Bloopers • 1994, District Tech Coordinator, “Only administrators need e-mail." • Early 1990s, WordPerfect Marketing Manager, “The Microsoft Office Suite is no threat to WordPerfect." • Mid-1990s, Novell Executive, “Why should we worry about the Internet? We have 40 million users and they only have 10 million users.”
Favorite Verbal Bloopers • Mid-1990s, Web education enthusiasts, “Internet distance education and online courses will replace most general education classes in college.” • Mid-1990s, Net Geeks, “Online shopping will eclipse shopping at brick & mortar stores like Wal-Mart .”
Michael Dell Bill Gates • One of these men was guilty of a blooper . . . at Comdex 2001
Bill Gates-- Comdex 2001 in November • “The Tablet takes cutting-edge PC technology and makes it available wherever you want it, which is why I'm already using a Tablet as my everyday computer. It's a PC that is virtually without limits -- and within five (now 4) years I predict it will be the most popular form of PC sold in America." • (Bill Gates Keynote Speech, Comdex 2001, downloaded from HTTP://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2001/.
Michael Dell -- Comdex 2001 in November • “COMDEX is a great time to remind us of all the wonderful technologies that are in search of a problem, and unfortunately, not all of those will actually be demanded by customers." …crash and burn • (Dell, Comdex 2001, downloaded from HTTP://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,6158.00.asp)
New Tablets Fall of 2002 Compaq Tatung Fujitsu
Microsoft Windows Professional XP • Tablet PC Edition • Microsoft Office XP • Speech and handwriting recognition built in • Dragon NaturallySpeaking or IBM ViaVoice
Bill Gates-- Continued • "The kind of devices we'll be working against, the user interface ... will be fundamentally different than it is today. People will look back and say, … • 'Wow! Why did I buy a PC that was big and I couldn't take it to a meeting and I couldn't talk to it? What was that all about?'" • July 3, 2000 (US News and World Report)
Implication # 1Smash the Desktop and Laptop Markets … in 4 years
Implication # 2Speech Will Reduce Certain Injuries • 10.5% Carpal • 25%-33% RSI • 600,000 per year
Bill Gates-- Continued . . . • “I’m a great believer in voice-recognition software… the state of the art is advancing, and . . . you may want to talk to your computer as much as you type-or more.” January 12, 1999
Implication # 3New Computer Literacy Skills • Pronunciation & Enunciation • Reading Aloud Clearly • Penmanship
The Holy Grail of Computer Input 1950’s 1960’s 1970’s
Implication # 4Rapid Decline of Keyboarding Instruction 2004-2006 • Speech: 110-160 wpm @ 95% and above 2-6 hours • Handwriting: 20-30 wpm 1 hour … by 2006
Bill Gates– May 2002 • “… the keyboard is a limiting factor and so the idea -- is to have a computer that instead of having the keyboard is more like just, say, a tablet of paper." • (Bill Gates Speech to Technology Alliance Summit, May 17, 2002, downloaded from http://www.microsoft.com/ billgates/speeches/2002/05-17techalliance.asp.)
Another Verbal Blooper? • “Keyboarding instruction will be dead by the end of the decade for regular education students. This will impact k-12 and college students. On the job, typing will he reduced to a very narrow segment of the job market: Could be an 80-90% reduction in typing from current levels by2009.” Karl Barksdale, Closing the Gap, 2002
Future of Keyboard ? • 2000, District Special Needs Services Director, “The day is coming soon when the keyboard will become an accommodation for those who can’t write or can’t speak.”
Input Technologies • NBEA’s National IT Standards admonish students to, “Use a variety of input technologies” and: • "Develop proper input techniques (e.g., keyboarding, scanning, speech recognition, handwriting recognition, and the use of a touch screen or mouse), including safety methods to avoid repetitive strain injury." • (Page 85, National Standards for Business Education, www.nbea.org, ISBN 0-933964-56-0)
Washington State • DigiTools: Curricular approach to input technologies revolution. • Career and Technical Education Website: "The New Curriculum Suggestions for Digital Communication Tools (working towards replacement of the CTE Keyboarding Curriculum)“ • Speech Recognition • Handwriting Recognition • Machine Translation • Net/Web applications • Word processing and “Office" relative to new input technologies • Real, project-based curriculum, aligned with high academic standards • www.digitalcommunicationtools.com
Reaching Everyone • How do we . . . • “Train 250,000 computer education instructors, 8 million teachers and support staff, and 80 million students in speech & handwriting recognition in less than eight years?” NBEA 2000: Anaheim, California • Train the Trainers in Business Education
Business Education Trainer of Trainers 2000 316 Business Education Trainers in 11 States
Business Education Trainer of Trainers 2001 1,550+ Trainers in 38 States
Business Education Trainer of Trainers 2002 4,000 – 5,000 Trainers of Trainers
Input Technologies • In the past two years the debate has shifted from “Should we teach SR & HR?” to more urgent questions: • What tools do we need? • What’s the new scope and sequence? • How do we integrate new input technologies into our courses?
Implication # 5Prepare for Workplace • 100 CEOs • Motorola & Plantronics, AT&T, Chevron, DOJ, KodakNortel, Teleco, Vodavi • Medical, Legal, Public Safety, All Businesses
The Scope ofRapid Change • “This will be in everything before long.” (IBM Employee, 1997) • The Technology Always Wins… like a ratchet that only turns one way. • Size and form factors of computers are changing. Tablet computers with touch screens or stylus combined with speech will make keyboards optional. Palm-sized speech computers will be popular.
Software Comparisons IBM ViaVoice 9 PC Mac Enhanced or OS X L&H Dragon NaturallySpeaking 6 Microsoft Office XP Speech Recognition
Fifteen Strategies www.SpeakingSolutions.com/resourcesHelping Slow Readers and ESL Students
Strategy # 1Pen Use • How to hold the pen • Don’t press hard!
Strategy # 2Where the Eyes Look • Watch the screen on the Graphire 2 • Watch the digital pointer on Tablet PC
Strategy # 3Hand-eye Coordination • Play Games
Strategy # 7Pre-read Training Stories • Have students pre-read the enrollment stories. • Students take the stories home and practice reading the scripts aloud under parental supervision several days before they do their enrollment training.
Strategy # 8Model Reading • Model how to speak clearly and continuously to a computer. Read the enrollment script pages aloud together in small reading groups before the students train their computers. • Read a single sentence or phrases first, and then allow them to read the same text back. Make corrections in their individual pronunciation at this time.