News

Welcome to Our New Site

**PLEASE NOTE: This website must be viewed with Microsoft Internet Explorer Version 7 (or with FireFox).**

This is the last year of our grant funding. You will find that all the products created during the past fifteen years are posted on this site for free download. We will be updating the site and some of the materials through-out the year and welcome your comments.

Upcoming Activities:

Please watch the website for registration information and detailed descriptions. Look for them to be posted under the Services Tab- Learning Opportunities.

• July 27-31, 2009 - Designing and Implementing Pragmatic Organization Dynamic Display (PODD) Communication Books training with Linda Burkhart and Gayle Porter at George Williams College, Williams Bay, WI. Located on Lake Geneva.
• December 3 and 4, 2009 - Assistive Technology Across the Lifespan Conference in the Wisconsin Dells.

New to the website:

• Discussion Board on NIMAS and AIM implementation- find it under the Links Tab- WATI Forum
• Online WATI lending library (Wisconsin patrons only) catalog- Find it on the library tab.
• New Bulk Buys on Nuance products- example: Dragon Naturally Speaking, with training supports created by Linda Baldwin of LAB Resources- find it under Services tab-Special Buys.

For questions regarding any of these items feel free to contact me at info@wati.org

Best Wishes,
Jill Gierach
WATI Director

Mission Statement

The Mission of the Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative is to assist school districts and Birth to 3 programs in their responsibility to ensure that every child in Wisconsin who may need assistive technology (AT) has equal and timely access to appropriate assesment and the provision and implementation of needed AT devices and services. The goal is to improve the outcomes and results for children with disabilities birth to 21 through the use of assistive technology to access services, curriculum, and school and community activities. The project increases the capacity of early intervention agencies, school districts, and their partners to provide assistive technology by making training and technical assistance available throughout Wisconsin.

Design of the Initiative

The Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative (WATI) began in the fall of 1993 in response to requests from numerous school districts to provide statewide leadership and technical assistance to help them implement the AT requirements in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). The Initiative is designed to provide not only training but also specific strategies to increase the capacity of school districts to provide assistive technology services. These include model forms, suggested procedures, resource materials and access to assistive technology for trial use. In addition to school districts, WATI services are also available to early intervention and early education providers. The activities of the Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative are grouped into four major components: provision of regional and local training; local technical assistance; increased access to resources; and development of a collegial support and technical assistance network of individuals across the state.

The Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative has both state level services and regional services in each of the 12 Cooperative Education Service Agencies (CESAs). The state level has a Lending Library of assistive technology items that is open to all school districts and Birth to 3 programs throughout the state. Additional activities carried out at the state level include providing support and leadership to the twelve regional consultants, providing specialized competency-based training, developing new resource guides or other materials for use by school personnel and parents, and arranging special buys of assistive technology products at reduced prices.

In each CESA the Assistive Technology Consultant works with staff from the constituent school districts to help them develop and improve their AT services. The AT Consultants in each CESA provide training, technical assistance and support to all who are striving to increase their capacity to provide effective, efficient AT services. They also have smaller lending libraries of AT available to their school districts and Birth to 3 programs.

Accomplishments

The Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative strives to help local school districts by providing a wide variety of services under the four components.

  • Last year WATI provided over 500 separate training sessions that reached over 6000 participants.
  • Last year WATI responded to more than 7000 requests for information or technical assistance related to assistive technology.
  • Last year WATI made more than 3000 loans of assistive technology for trial use.
  • Last year WATI arranged special group buys that have resulted in over $2 million in savings to Wisconsin school districts.

The Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative is recognized as a leader in the provision of statewide support for assistive technology services.

  • The WATI Assessment materials (Student Information Guide, Environmental Observation Guide, AT Planning Guide, and AT Checklist) are used throughout the United States.
  • The manual Assessing Students' Need for Assistive Technology has been purchased by school districts in 47 states and seven countries.
  • WATI staff members are frequently invited to provide training in other states and have recently provided training on a variety of AT topics in more than 20 states.
  • WATI staff members regularly are invited to provide preconference workshops and invited sessions at national and international assistive technology conferences.
  • WATI staff regularly are invited to teach courses and serve as guest lecturers on the topic of assistive technology at Wisconsin state universities and colleges.
  • WATI materials have been included in two recent textbooks on teaching children with disabilities.
  • Austin Independent School District in Austin, Texas chose the WATI Assessment materials to use in implementing a district wide training grant to improve the delivery of assistive technology services.
  • The Council for Exceptional Children's IDEA Partnership project, ILIAD, selected for national distribution the AT Consideration Quick List, which was developed by WATI in collaboration with the Technology and Media Division of CEC. It uses information from WATI's AT Checklist arranged in a wheel format to make a quick and easy tool to help IEP teams consider the need for assistive technology.