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OVERVIEW POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!
OBJECTIVES Students will: Depending on how you design the assignment, students may also: GRADE LEVEL: 9-12 SUBJECT AREAS: Subject area can vary, depending on how you choose to design the assignment. Possible areas of emphasis include: art, civics, computer science, diversity/multicultural education, engineering, health/life skills, history, mathematics, science, special education, technology. MATERIALS Other materials will depend on how you choose to structure the assignment (see activity Step 2). ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: 5 class periods over several weeks.
BACKGROUND According to the Alliance for Technology Access, Assistive Technology is any tool that helps individuals with disabilities to use their own unique abilities to reach their goals. These technological tools (computers and communication devices) are generally used to access education, employment, recreation, communication, and/or to live as independently as possible. In this lesson, an introduction to assistive technologies provides a gateway for students to think more deeply about public policy, the endless possibilities of technological innovation, and the human side of both policy and innovation. The lesson is designed to help you seamlessly integrate diversity education into a civics, mathematics, computer, or science project.
ACTIVITY Step 1: View the film as preparation for the main assignment. Instruct students to pay special attention to the kinds of technology featured in the film and how it helps those who use it. Also let students know that they will be interviewing people who might need or use assistive technologies and recommend that they pay attention to the kind of language used (keeping it respectful) and the kinds of questions they might ask if it were their job to manufacture the technology. Option: If time is short, you may want to pick 2-3 people in the film and just show the clips that tell their stories. Step 2: Assign students the following project: Invent an assistive technology using the following procedure:
  1. Do a needs assessment by looking carefully around your community (or school). What kinds of things present obstacles to people? Optional: As part of the needs assessment, civics students might be asked to investigate what laws require in terms of providing assistive technologies. See the Resources sections for links to the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
  2. Once you have identified an obstacle, interview people affected by that obstacle to find out what kinds of things might be helpful and what things would not be helpful.
  3. Design an assistive technology to eliminate or address the obstacle. Note: For this final step, tailor the project requirements to your students' skill level and subject area. Computer, engineering, or math students might be asked to create prototypes. Art students might be asked to produce models or drawings. Civics or health students might be asked to imagine and describe a possible technology. Or, you might use this as an opportunity for students with varying skills and interests to collaborate.
Step 3: Before sending students out to interview people with disabilities or special needs, brief students on how to ask respectful, effective questions. Discuss appropriate and inappropriate language. For example, it will be especially important to agree on acceptable terminology around disabilities. Some people find the terms "handicapped" or "disabled" to be demeaning because they define a person by their disabilities, while others deliberately use the terms because they find them to be helpful in drawing attention to needed accommodations or assistance. There is no absolute right or wrong. Work with people with disabilities in your community or school to find out what terms are commonly used where you live and which terms are interpreted as offensive. Help students list possible terms and phrases (e.g., disabled, handicapped, differently abled, people with disabilities). Ask students to discuss how the terms differ in the kinds of images they evoke and why people in their community might prefer some terms over others. You might consider using this assignment to help students in your class become better acquainted with your school's students with disabilities, who are often socially isolated. Prior to beginning this project, consult with your colleagues who teach special needs students about how you might work together to facilitate interaction between students with disabilities, who will take the role of "expert" in this project, and students who will need to get information from people with disabilities about what kinds of things might improve their abilities to succeed. Step 4: Give the students several weeks to complete their projects. Set a date for them to present their ideas to one another. Let students know that they will have to choose the idea they think is best, so they will need to pay close attention to each project. Step 5: Ask students to complete the sentence, "From this project, I learned..." Discuss their answers. Note that the point is not necessarily to come up with the next earth-shattering invention (though, if that happens, kudos to you), but rather, to think about how technology can change lives and to become more aware of how people with disabilities might be able to participate and contribute more fully if provided with the right tools.
ASSESSMENT After all students have presented their ideas, ask each student to select the one that they think is the most promising. They should write one to two paragraphs explaining their choice, including how the idea met the following criteria: How significant is the need it meets? How well does it meet that need? Assuming that funding and other professional expertise was available, is it realistic? Would it be affordable for the end user? Would it be easy to use by the people who need to use it? Another option would be to have your students present their ideas to an expert panel made up of people with disabilities. You might contact your local Independent Living Center to recruit volunteers.
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS
RESOURCES The Alliance for Technology Access is a network of community-based resource centers, developers, vendors and associates who provide information and support to help children and adults with disabilities increase their use of standard, assistive, and information technologies. The website includes a helpful FAQs section (click on "resources" from the homepage) and a helpful assessment and information tool, "An Introduction to Creating Access for People with Disabilities in Community-Based Organizations." The U.S. Department of Justice's home page on the American with Disabilities Act. Information on compliance requirements for a wide variety of situations, links to related agencies, standards for accessible design, and the rights conferred by the Act. The text of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, signed into law by President Clinton in June 1997, covers what school districts are responsible to do.
STANDARDS The Standards addressed by the lesson will vary, depending on how you design the assignment in Step 2, but may include: Level IV: Grades 9-12 Technology
Standard 3: Understands the relationships among science, technology, society, and the individual Standard 4: Understands the nature of technological design Standard 6: Understands the nature and uses of different forms of technology Thinking and Reasoning Standard 1: Understands and applies the basic principles of presenting an argument Standard 5: Applies basic trouble-shooting and problem-solving techniques
Language Arts -- Listening and Speaking
Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes
Language Arts -- Writing
Standard 1: Uses the general skills and strategies of the writing process Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Civics
Standard 26: Understands issues regarding the proper scope and limits of rights and the relationships among personal, political, and economic rights
Mathematics
Standard 1: Uses a variety of strategies in the problem-solving process
Science -- Nature of Science
Standard 13: Understands the scientific enterprise Standard 2: Understands that individuals and teams contribute to science and engineering at different levels of complexity Standard 6: Knows that creativity, imagination, and a good knowledge base are all required in the work of science and engineering

Source: http://www.mcrel.org

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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:


OVERVIEW POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!
OBJECTIVES Students will: Depending on how you design the assignment, students may also: GRADE LEVEL: 9-12 SUBJECT AREAS: Subject area can vary, depending on how you choose to design the assignment. Possible areas of emphasis include: art, civics, computer science, diversity/multicultural education, engineering, health/life skills, history, mathematics, science, special education, technology. MATERIALS Other materials will depend on how you choose to structure the assignment (see activity Step 2). ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: 5 class periods over several weeks.
BACKGROUND According to the Alliance for Technology Access, Assistive Technology is any tool that helps individuals with disabilities to use their own unique abilities to reach their goals. These technological tools (computers and communication devices) are generally used to access education, employment, recreation, communication, and/or to live as independently as possible. In this lesson, an introduction to assistive technologies provides a gateway for students to think more deeply about public policy, the endless possibilities of technological innovation, and the human side of both policy and innovation. The lesson is designed to help you seamlessly integrate diversity education into a civics, mathematics, computer, or science project.
ACTIVITY Step 1: View the film as preparation for the main assignment. Instruct students to pay special attention to the kinds of technology featured in the film and how it helps those who use it. Also let students know that they will be interviewing people who might need or use assistive technologies and recommend that they pay attention to the kind of language used (keeping it respectful) and the kinds of questions they might ask if it were their job to manufacture the technology. Option: If time is short, you may want to pick 2-3 people in the film and just show the clips that tell their stories. Step 2: Assign students the following project: Invent an assistive technology using the following procedure:
  1. Do a needs assessment by looking carefully around your community (or school). What kinds of things present obstacles to people? Optional: As part of the needs assessment, civics students might be asked to investigate what laws require in terms of providing assistive technologies. See the Resources sections for links to the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
  2. Once you have identified an obstacle, interview people affected by that obstacle to find out what kinds of things might be helpful and what things would not be helpful.
  3. Design an assistive technology to eliminate or address the obstacle. Note: For this final step, tailor the project requirements to your students' skill level and subject area. Computer, engineering, or math students might be asked to create prototypes. Art students might be asked to produce models or drawings. Civics or health students might be asked to imagine and describe a possible technology. Or, you might use this as an opportunity for students with varying skills and interests to collaborate.
Step 3: Before sending students out to interview people with disabilities or special needs, brief students on how to ask respectful, effective questions. Discuss appropriate and inappropriate language. For example, it will be especially important to agree on acceptable terminology around disabilities. Some people find the terms "handicapped" or "disabled" to be demeaning because they define a person by their disabilities, while others deliberately use the terms because they find them to be helpful in drawing attention to needed accommodations or assistance. There is no absolute right or wrong. Work with people with disabilities in your community or school to find out what terms are commonly used where you live and which terms are interpreted as offensive. Help students list possible terms and phrases (e.g., disabled, handicapped, differently abled, people with disabilities). Ask students to discuss how the terms differ in the kinds of images they evoke and why people in their community might prefer some terms over others. You might consider using this assignment to help students in your class become better acquainted with your school's students with disabilities, who are often socially isolated. Prior to beginning this project, consult with your colleagues who teach special needs students about how you might work together to facilitate interaction between students with disabilities, who will take the role of "expert" in this project, and students who will need to get information from people with disabilities about what kinds of things might improve their abilities to succeed. Step 4: Give the students several weeks to complete their projects. Set a date for them to present their ideas to one another. Let students know that they will have to choose the idea they think is best, so they will need to pay close attention to each project. Step 5: Ask students to complete the sentence, "From this project, I learned..." Discuss their answers. Note that the point is not necessarily to come up with the next earth-shattering invention (though, if that happens, kudos to you), but rather, to think about how technology can change lives and to become more aware of how people with disabilities might be able to participate and contribute more fully if provided with the right tools.
ASSESSMENT After all students have presented their ideas, ask each student to select the one that they think is the most promising. They should write one to two paragraphs explaining their choice, including how the idea met the following criteria: How significant is the need it meets? How well does it meet that need? Assuming that funding and other professional expertise was available, is it realistic? Would it be affordable for the end user? Would it be easy to use by the people who need to use it? Another option would be to have your students present their ideas to an expert panel made up of people with disabilities. You might contact your local Independent Living Center to recruit volunteers.
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS
RESOURCES The Alliance for Technology Access is a network of community-based resource centers, developers, vendors and associates who provide information and support to help children and adults with disabilities increase their use of standard, assistive, and information technologies. The website includes a helpful FAQs section (click on "resources" from the homepage) and a helpful assessment and information tool, "An Introduction to Creating Access for People with Disabilities in Community-Based Organizations." The U.S. Department of Justice's home page on the American with Disabilities Act. Information on compliance requirements for a wide variety of situations, links to related agencies, standards for accessible design, and the rights conferred by the Act. The text of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, signed into law by President Clinton in June 1997, covers what school districts are responsible to do.
STANDARDS The Standards addressed by the lesson will vary, depending on how you design the assignment in Step 2, but may include: Level IV: Grades 9-12 Technology
Standard 3: Understands the relationships among science, technology, society, and the individual Standard 4: Understands the nature of technological design Standard 6: Understands the nature and uses of different forms of technology Thinking and Reasoning Standard 1: Understands and applies the basic principles of presenting an argument Standard 5: Applies basic trouble-shooting and problem-solving techniques
Language Arts -- Listening and Speaking
Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes
Language Arts -- Writing
Standard 1: Uses the general skills and strategies of the writing process Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Civics
Standard 26: Understands issues regarding the proper scope and limits of rights and the relationships among personal, political, and economic rights
Mathematics
Standard 1: Uses a variety of strategies in the problem-solving process
Science -- Nature of Science
Standard 13: Understands the scientific enterprise Standard 2: Understands that individuals and teams contribute to science and engineering at different levels of complexity Standard 6: Knows that creativity, imagination, and a good knowledge base are all required in the work of science and engineering

Source: http://www.mcrel.org

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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:


OVERVIEW POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!
OBJECTIVES Students will: Depending on how you design the assignment, students may also: GRADE LEVEL: 9-12 SUBJECT AREAS: Subject area can vary, depending on how you choose to design the assignment. Possible areas of emphasis include: art, civics, computer science, diversity/multicultural education, engineering, health/life skills, history, mathematics, science, special education, technology. MATERIALS Other materials will depend on how you choose to structure the assignment (see activity Step 2). ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: 5 class periods over several weeks.
BACKGROUND According to the Alliance for Technology Access, Assistive Technology is any tool that helps individuals with disabilities to use their own unique abilities to reach their goals. These technological tools (computers and communication devices) are generally used to access education, employment, recreation, communication, and/or to live as independently as possible. In this lesson, an introduction to assistive technologies provides a gateway for students to think more deeply about public policy, the endless possibilities of technological innovation, and the human side of both policy and innovation. The lesson is designed to help you seamlessly integrate diversity education into a civics, mathematics, computer, or science project.
ACTIVITY Step 1: View the film as preparation for the main assignment. Instruct students to pay special attention to the kinds of technology featured in the film and how it helps those who use it. Also let students know that they will be interviewing people who might need or use assistive technologies and recommend that they pay attention to the kind of language used (keeping it respectful) and the kinds of questions they might ask if it were their job to manufacture the technology. Option: If time is short, you may want to pick 2-3 people in the film and just show the clips that tell their stories. Step 2: Assign students the following project: Invent an assistive technology using the following procedure:
  1. Do a needs assessment by looking carefully around your community (or school). What kinds of things present obstacles to people? Optional: As part of the needs assessment, civics students might be asked to investigate what laws require in terms of providing assistive technologies. See the Resources sections for links to the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
  2. Once you have identified an obstacle, interview people affected by that obstacle to find out what kinds of things might be helpful and what things would not be helpful.
  3. Design an assistive technology to eliminate or address the obstacle. Note: For this final step, tailor the project requirements to your students' skill level and subject area. Computer, engineering, or math students might be asked to create prototypes. Art students might be asked to produce models or drawings. Civics or health students might be asked to imagine and describe a possible technology. Or, you might use this as an opportunity for students with varying skills and interests to collaborate.
Step 3: Before sending students out to interview people with disabilities or special needs, brief students on how to ask respectful, effective questions. Discuss appropriate and inappropriate language. For example, it will be especially important to agree on acceptable terminology around disabilities. Some people find the terms "handicapped" or "disabled" to be demeaning because they define a person by their disabilities, while others deliberately use the terms because they find them to be helpful in drawing attention to needed accommodations or assistance. There is no absolute right or wrong. Work with people with disabilities in your community or school to find out what terms are commonly used where you live and which terms are interpreted as offensive. Help students list possible terms and phrases (e.g., disabled, handicapped, differently abled, people with disabilities). Ask students to discuss how the terms differ in the kinds of images they evoke and why people in their community might prefer some terms over others. You might consider using this assignment to help students in your class become better acquainted with your school's students with disabilities, who are often socially isolated. Prior to beginning this project, consult with your colleagues who teach special needs students about how you might work together to facilitate interaction between students with disabilities, who will take the role of "expert" in this project, and students who will need to get information from people with disabilities about what kinds of things might improve their abilities to succeed. Step 4: Give the students several weeks to complete their projects. Set a date for them to present their ideas to one another. Let students know that they will have to choose the idea they think is best, so they will need to pay close attention to each project. Step 5: Ask students to complete the sentence, "From this project, I learned..." Discuss their answers. Note that the point is not necessarily to come up with the next earth-shattering invention (though, if that happens, kudos to you), but rather, to think about how technology can change lives and to become more aware of how people with disabilities might be able to participate and contribute more fully if provided with the right tools.
ASSESSMENT After all students have presented their ideas, ask each student to select the one that they think is the most promising. They should write one to two paragraphs explaining their choice, including how the idea met the following criteria: How significant is the need it meets? How well does it meet that need? Assuming that funding and other professional expertise was available, is it realistic? Would it be affordable for the end user? Would it be easy to use by the people who need to use it? Another option would be to have your students present their ideas to an expert panel made up of people with disabilities. You might contact your local Independent Living Center to recruit volunteers.
EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS
RESOURCES The Alliance for Technology Access is a network of community-based resource centers, developers, vendors and associates who provide information and support to help children and adults with disabilities increase their use of standard, assistive, and information technologies. The website includes a helpful FAQs section (click on "resources" from the homepage) and a helpful assessment and information tool, "An Introduction to Creating Access for People with Disabilities in Community-Based Organizations." The U.S. Department of Justice's home page on the American with Disabilities Act. Information on compliance requirements for a wide variety of situations, links to related agencies, standards for accessible design, and the rights conferred by the Act. The text of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, signed into law by President Clinton in June 1997, covers what school districts are responsible to do.
STANDARDS The Standards addressed by the lesson will vary, depending on how you design the assignment in Step 2, but may include: Level IV: Grades 9-12 Technology
Standard 3: Understands the relationships among science, technology, society, and the individual Standard 4: Understands the nature of technological design Standard 6: Understands the nature and uses of different forms of technology Thinking and Reasoning Standard 1: Understands and applies the basic principles of presenting an argument Standard 5: Applies basic trouble-shooting and problem-solving techniques
Language Arts -- Listening and Speaking
Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes
Language Arts -- Writing
Standard 1: Uses the general skills and strategies of the writing process Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes
Civics
Standard 26: Understands issues regarding the proper scope and limits of rights and the relationships among personal, political, and economic rights
Mathematics
Standard 1: Uses a variety of strategies in the problem-solving process
Science -- Nature of Science
Standard 13: Understands the scientific enterprise Standard 2: Understands that individuals and teams contribute to science and engineering at different levels of complexity Standard 6: Knows that creativity, imagination, and a good knowledge base are all required in the work of science and engineering

Source: http://www.mcrel.org

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Freedom Machines: Lesson Plan: Technology Transforming Lives: Disability and Technology

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OVERVIEW

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs that you can borrow anytime during the school year -- FOR FREE!


OBJECTIVES

Students will:

Depending on how you design the assignment, students may also:

GRADE LEVEL:
9-12

SUBJECT AREAS: Subject area can vary, depending on how you choose to design the assignment. Possible areas of emphasis include: art, civics, computer science, diversity/multicultural education, engineering, health/life skills, history, mathematics, science, special education, technology.

MATERIALS

Other materials will depend on how you choose to structure the assignment (see activity Step 2).

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: 5 class periods over several weeks.


BACKGROUND

According to the Alliance for Technology Access, Assistive Technology is any tool that helps individuals with disabilities to use their own unique abilities to reach their goals. These technological tools (computers and communication devices) are generally used to access education, employment, recreation, communication, and/or to live as independently as possible.

In this lesson, an introduction to assistive technologies provides a gateway
for students to think more deeply about public policy, the endless possibilities
of technological innovation, and the human side of both policy and innovation.
The lesson is designed to help you seamlessly integrate diversity education into
a civics, mathematics, computer, or science project.


ACTIVITY

Step 1:
View the film as preparation for the main assignment. Instruct students to pay
special attention to the kinds of technology featured in the film and how it
helps those who use it. Also let students know that they will be interviewing
people who might need or use assistive technologies and recommend that they pay
attention to the kind of language used (keeping it respectful) and the kinds
of questions they might ask if it were their job to manufacture the technology.

Option: If time is short, you may want to pick 2-3 people in the film and just show the clips that tell their stories.

Step 2:

Assign students the following project:

Invent an assistive technology using the following procedure:

  1. Do a needs assessment by looking carefully around your community (or school). What kinds of things present obstacles to people?

    Optional: As part of the needs assessment, civics students might be asked to investigate what laws require in terms of providing assistive technologies. See the Resources sections for links to the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

  2. Once you have identified an obstacle, interview people affected by that obstacle to find out what kinds of things might be helpful and what things would not be helpful.
  3. Design an assistive technology to eliminate or address the obstacle.

    Note: For this final step, tailor the project requirements to
    your students' skill level and subject area. Computer, engineering, or math students
    might be asked to create prototypes. Art students might be asked to produce models
    or drawings. Civics or health students might be asked to imagine and describe
    a possible technology. Or, you might use this as an opportunity for students
    with varying skills and interests to collaborate.

Step 3:

Before sending students out to interview people with disabilities or special
needs, brief students on how to ask respectful, effective questions. Discuss
appropriate and inappropriate language. For example, it will be especially important
to agree on acceptable terminology around disabilities. Some people find the
terms "handicapped" or "disabled" to be demeaning because they define a person
by their disabilities, while others deliberately use the terms because they find
them to be helpful in drawing attention to needed accommodations or assistance.

There is no absolute right or wrong. Work with people with disabilities in your community or school to find out what terms are commonly used where you live and which terms are interpreted as offensive. Help students list possible terms and phrases (e.g., disabled, handicapped, differently abled, people with disabilities). Ask students to discuss how the terms differ in the kinds of images they evoke and why people in their community might prefer some terms over others.

You might consider using this assignment to help students in your class become better acquainted with your school's students with disabilities, who are often socially isolated. Prior to beginning this project, consult with your colleagues who teach special needs students about how you might work together to facilitate interaction between students with disabilities, who will take the role of "expert" in this project, and students who will need to get information from people with disabilities about what kinds of things might improve their abilities to succeed.

Step 4:

Give the students several weeks to complete their projects. Set a date for them to present their ideas to one another. Let students know that they will have to choose the idea they think is best, so they will need to pay close attention to each project.

Step 5:

Ask students to complete the sentence, "From this project, I learned..." Discuss their answers. Note that the point is not necessarily to come up with the next earth-shattering invention (though, if that happens, kudos to you), but rather, to think about how technology can change lives and to become more aware of how people with disabilities might be able to participate and contribute more fully if provided with the right tools.


ASSESSMENT

After all students have presented their ideas, ask each student to select the
one that they think is the most promising. They should write one to two paragraphs
explaining their choice, including how the idea met the following criteria: How
significant is the need it meets? How well does it meet that need? Assuming that
funding and other professional expertise was available, is it realistic? Would
it be affordable for the end user? Would it be easy to use by the people who
need to use it?

Another option would be to have your students present their ideas to an expert panel made up of people with disabilities. You might contact your local Independent
Living Center
to recruit volunteers.


EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS


RESOURCES

The Alliance for Technology Access is a network of community-based resource centers, developers, vendors and associates who provide information and support to help children and adults with disabilities increase their use of standard, assistive, and information technologies. The website includes a helpful FAQs section (click on "resources" from the homepage) and a helpful assessment and information tool, "An Introduction to Creating Access for People with Disabilities in Community-Based Organizations."

The U.S. Department of Justice's home page on the American with Disabilities Act. Information on compliance requirements for a wide variety of situations, links to related agencies, standards for accessible design, and the rights conferred by the Act.

The text of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, signed into law by President Clinton in June 1997, covers what school districts are responsible to do.


STANDARDS

The Standards addressed by the lesson will vary, depending on how you design the assignment in Step 2, but may include:

Level IV: Grades 9-12

Technology

Standard 3: Understands the relationships among science, technology, society, and the individual
Standard 4: Understands the nature of technological design
Standard 6: Understands the nature and uses of different forms of technology

Thinking and Reasoning
Standard 1: Understands and applies the basic principles of presenting an argument
Standard 5: Applies basic trouble-shooting and problem-solving techniques

Language Arts -- Listening and Speaking

Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes

Language Arts -- Writing

Standard 1: Uses the general skills and strategies of the writing process
Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes

Civics

Standard 26: Understands issues regarding the proper scope and limits of rights and the relationships among personal, political, and economic rights

Mathematics

Standard 1: Uses a variety of strategies in the problem-solving process

Science -- Nature of Science

Standard 13: Understands the scientific enterprise
Standard 2: Understands that individuals and teams contribute to science and engineering at different levels of complexity
Standard 6: Knows that creativity, imagination, and a good knowledge base are all required in the work of science and engineering

Source: http://www.mcrel.org