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Speak Up: A Multi-Year Deployment of Games to Motivate Speech Therapy in India
Resource type
            Conference Paper
        Authors/contributors
                    - Nanavati, Amal (Author)
 - Dias, M. Bernardine (Author)
 - Steinfeld, Aaron (Author)
 
Title
            Speak Up: A Multi-Year Deployment of Games to Motivate Speech Therapy in India
        Abstract
            The ability to communicate is crucial to leading an independent life. Unfortunately, individuals from developing communities who are deaf and hard of hearing tend to encounter difficulty communicating, due to a lack of educational resources. We present findings from a two-year deployment of Speak Up, a suite of voice-powered games to motivate speech therapy, at a school for the deaf in India. Using ethnographic methods, we investigated the interplay between Speak Up and local educational practices. We found that teachers’ speech therapy goals had evolved to differ from those encoded in the games, that the games influenced classroom dynamics, and that teachers had improved their computer literacy and developed creative uses for the games. We used these insights to further enhance Speak Up by creating an explicit teacher role in the games, making changes that encouraged teachers to build their computer literacy, and adding an embodied agent.
        Date
            2018
        Proceedings Title
            Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems  - CHI '18
        Conference Name
            the 2018 CHI Conference
        Place
            Montreal QC, Canada
        Publisher
            ACM Press
        Pages
            1-12
        Language
            en
        ISBN
            978-1-4503-5620-6
        Short Title
            Speak Up
        Accessed
            10/12/2020, 15:34
        Library Catalogue
            DOI.org (Crossref)
        Citation
            Nanavati, A., Dias, M. B., & Steinfeld, A. (2018). Speak Up: A Multi-Year Deployment of Games to Motivate Speech Therapy in India. Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems  - CHI ’18, 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1145/3173574.3173892
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