To follow up with the issues students with learning disabilities have to overcome, here are some free and/or open source solutions.
Of course this assumes that there is a
PC, laptop or netbook available for use.
For reading (a major issue for students with learning disability), a good all around program
which can open text and Word document files but also ePub files,
Balabolka. Balabolka has text to speech capabilities and can save the
file to a variety of audio formats with a few clicks.
For accessible eBooks, the old
reliable, Project Gutenberg with over 36,000 books out of copyright
and in the public domain. Project Gutenberg has expanded it's
offerings to a variety of formats, including ePub, Kindle, Plucker
and text. In some cases, there are also audio files, some of which
are computer generated and some have recorded.
For writing,consider an alternative to
MS Office – OpenOffice.org. Openoffice.org is a full featured office suite with a word processor,
spreadsheet, presentation program, drawing program, equation editor
and a database program. All in all, almost the equivalent of MS
Office Professional. The word processor is full featured and has
add-ins for Zotero and a text-to-speech program (Read
Text)
For mindmapping, XMind
is a free open source organizational program.
For time and task management, Chandler
is an open source program for adding tasks, appointments and alarms.
For more information and links, check out
NPTraining.net.