Teaching Accessibility by Building Picture Books for the Blind image
S4 E7 · The K12 Engineering Education Podcast
Teaching Accessibility by Building Picture Books for the Blind
114 Plays
4 years ago
How can you teach universal design to kids and teens? Have them build accessible games and books, according to The Build a Better Book project, from The University of Colorado Boulder. Guests Dr. Stacey Forsythe and Dr. Kathryn Penzkover develop the Build a Better Book project at UC Boulder, which provides curriculum for schools and libraries to teach people to create books and games for the visually impaired. Along the way, they can learn about the design process, makerspace technology, the arts, empathy, and community engagement. Drs. Forsythe and Penzkover spoke on the podcast during South by Southwest (SXSW) 2019 in Austin, Texas. The cover art for this episode shows a picture book and a chessboard designed by participants in the Build a Better Book project, as shown during SXSW. Both were designed to preserve function and aesthetics even when the reader or player can’t see. Related to this episode: • Build a Better Book project: http://buildabetterbook.org • Dr. Stacy Forsythe: https://www.colorado.edu/sciencediscovery/stacey-forsyth • Dr. Kathryn Penzkover: https://www.colorado.edu/sciencediscovery/kathryn-penzkover • CU Science Discovery: https://www.colorado.edu/sciencediscovery/ • Wikki stix: https://www.wikkistix.com/ • Universal design, as described from the North Carolina State University College of Design: https://projects.ncsu.edu/ncsu/design/cud/about_ud/udprinciples.htm • Twitter profile for Build a Better Book: https://twitter.com/buildbetterbook Subscribe and find more podcast information at: http://www.k12engineering.net. Support Pios Labs with regular donations on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pioslabs, or send one-time contributions by buying us coffee: https://ko-fi.com/pioslabs. Thanks to our donors and listeners for making the show possible. The K12 Engineering Education Podcast is a production of Pios Labs: http://www.pioslabs.com.
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