11/23/2023 0 Comments Professional note takers![]() However, it seems we often assign this accommodation because it is easier than explaining how to use other options or because it is easier than arguing with an instructor to share their PowerPoints. ![]() For instance, a student that cannot physically write or type notes, a student who is watching an interpreter during the entire class, or maybe a student with an auditory processing disorder may truly need a peer notetaker of some type to ensure they have notes to study from later. There will always be students who require someone else’s notes to access class information, but I argue that it should only be utilized when a student cannot take notes for themselves. Instead, this section is focused on the overuse of peer notetakers. This guide is not designed to address best practices for implementing peer notetaker systems because that varies widely with campus culture and context. The other common accommodation for notetaking is the use of peer notetakers. Peer Notetakers (Dependent Accommodations) That freedom can also create confidence and remove some of the anxiety of participating in class. Knowing the recording will allow students to fill in gaps, students can actually begin paraphrasing and using shorthand to write down what is important for their needs instead of writing every word. In either case, the students have access to the information at a later time to fill in any gaps in their own notes, but they have to capture their own notes for those to be meaningful. If there is also a difficulty with writing verbal lecture and things displayed on the board, then students may require copies of PowerPoints and lecture materials or take photos of the board as needed to free up time and ability to process the information and write only the necessary notes. The option to record audio takes away pressure to hear and write every word because they can go back to the information they missed later. Typically, it seems recording lecture audio makes it possible for students to have access to the information and allows them to take chances on improving their notetaking. Supplementary Accommodations (Independent Accommodations) ![]() This resource is intended to help disability services professionals work with a more deliberate understanding of accommodations, strategies, and tools. That should include not only critically deciding what types of accommodation are the right fit, but also providing some coaching on how to best use those accommodations with other note-taking strategies. Most likely, there is a combination of disability and strategy at play, and it makes it even more important that disability services professionals work to ensure that students with disabilities utilize effective accommodations and strategies to improve access. ![]() It is difficult to determine whether students’ concerns with note-taking are born out of disability or due to a lack of strategy and experience as a notetaker. Note-taking accommodations are an increasingly important topic that require thoughtful discussion, but we often ignore it so that we may focus on seemingly riskier and more challenging issues. Note-taking Accommodations and Technology: The Basics (Part II) Beginning below and extending into the next edition of the Hub, we are pleased to share a summary of issues and resources pertinent to note-taking accommodations from Paul Harwell of Texas A&M University. New teaching styles, database programs, and note-taking technologies are pushing us to reconsider what “note-taking” really is: what it means to experience a barrier related to capturing information during a class lecture and how we can set-up systems that encourage skill development while ensuring that students with disabilities are not excluded. Increasingly, we hear members question how and to whom they provide note-taking accommodations. ![]()
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