This is an amazing talk. I’m an educator, but thinking of my job as innovation of education and how learning disabilities (or different learning styles) and teaching in a way that is accessible to all benefits ALL students, not just the ones with said disabilities. Thinking of disability as driving innovation is an incredible way to frame education and teaching. Thank you for this!
As a deaf person, he naturally has more empathy than most of us and with empathy skills, he can put himself into the shoes, hearts and minds of people from all over the world. Empathy is the best skill for someone in marketing! :D
As mentioned by others, clean captions (with proper transcription of words, punctuation, and capitalization) would be helpful and would enable those who cannot hear AND do not know ASL to benefit from this video. (Kinda ironic, since this is about UD.)
If you Click the CC button there are subtitles, not sure how accurate google youtube autotranslator is, good point, as relying on RUclips Subtitles can be unintened by the production studio, TED should defintitely make that mandatory.
@@Quantum_LightCodes TED videos are always properly captioned, but TEDx have different standards, unfortunately. The auto-generated captions are very unusable, even when the words are (mostly) correct. The lack of capitalization and punctuation create a much higher level of cognitive load. As a hard of hearing person who is not proficient in ASL, if a video doesn't have good captions, I don't watch, and I don't share it with my students.
Yes, I thought the same thing as the last comment, quite ironic. I am hearing but spent 10 years volunteering within the deaf community. When I watch videos, like this one, I turn the sound off. Although the techs doing the video recording do an excellent job when it is a hearing person, they need to be aware that an ASL "speaker" with an interpreter, is a different situation.
This was great! I do wish the camera work had been more deaf-friendly: the cutaways to the audience were frustrating, and some of the close-up shots of the speaker were too close in, so you couldn't see the full signs.
Bold, brave, and to the point. Sure we all are disabled in some way. Not all of us can use a cell phone, computer or laptop to its full potential. An encouraging speech! Congratulations!
Based on comments from deaf people, majority of them don't like to use glasses to watch captions. Many complain about Sony Glass and Captiview. They would prefer to watch OPEN captions on a screen - it's what is universal design, not eyeglasses.
That camera work needed adjustments. When they cut away to the fullscreen images it completely messed me up and I had no idea what he was talking about. they should've done partial images
We need universal design everywhere. Thank you for highlighting its significance so well.
This is an amazing talk. I’m an educator, but thinking of my job as innovation of education and how learning disabilities (or different learning styles) and teaching in a way that is accessible to all benefits ALL students, not just the ones with said disabilities. Thinking of disability as driving innovation is an incredible way to frame education and teaching. Thank you for this!
Truly an excellent Ted talk with something important to say about something ubiquitous and at times forgotten.
As a deaf person, he naturally has more empathy than most of us and with empathy skills, he can put himself into the shoes, hearts and minds of people from all over the world. Empathy is the best skill for someone in marketing! :D
Parabéns Sanjuansteve. Depois dê uma olhada no meu canal sobre iluminação. Tem vídeo novo
As mentioned by others, clean captions (with proper transcription of words, punctuation, and capitalization) would be helpful and would enable those who cannot hear AND do not know ASL to benefit from this video. (Kinda ironic, since this is about UD.)
If you Click the CC button there are subtitles, not sure how accurate google youtube autotranslator is, good point, as relying on RUclips Subtitles can be unintened by the production studio, TED should defintitely make that mandatory.
@@Quantum_LightCodes TED videos are always properly captioned, but TEDx have different standards, unfortunately. The auto-generated captions are very unusable, even when the words are (mostly) correct. The lack of capitalization and punctuation create a much higher level of cognitive load. As a hard of hearing person who is not proficient in ASL, if a video doesn't have good captions, I don't watch, and I don't share it with my students.
Yes, I thought the same thing as the last comment, quite ironic. I am hearing but spent 10 years volunteering within the deaf community. When I watch videos, like this one, I turn the sound off. Although the techs doing the video recording do an excellent job when it is a hearing person, they need to be aware that an ASL "speaker" with an interpreter, is a different situation.
God bless these minds and everyone! May we bring each other closer to him through spreading blessings!
amazing to watch this, with the deaf interpreter speaking live... that was a beautiful dance :) And a great introduction to Universal Design too.
Just reviewed this and am glad to have learned universal design as a concept
This was great! I do wish the camera work had been more deaf-friendly: the cutaways to the audience were frustrating, and some of the close-up shots of the speaker were too close in, so you couldn't see the full signs.
There is a cc caption available tho
@@soolenia9844 It's still best for some people to be able to see the signing.
@@soolenia9844 ASL is many people's first language, and perhaps their only language. Signs need to be seen.
His charisma is off the charts, I got sucked in
love love love this!!! will be sharing it as part of a DEI project
Bold, brave, and to the point. Sure we all are disabled in some way. Not all of us can use a cell phone, computer or laptop to its full potential. An encouraging speech! Congratulations!
This is an amazing talk!!. Currently going through a Universal Design and Accessibility course ,and it everything now resonates
I enjoyed this excellent presentation. Thank you for providing it!
Thanks for this ! Great presentation.
I wish the captions were more accurate. That is my only critique. Otherwise, a great talk!
Brilliant talk !! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
No talk
Based on comments from deaf people, majority of them don't like to use glasses to watch captions. Many complain about Sony Glass and Captiview. They would prefer to watch OPEN captions on a screen - it's what is universal design, not eyeglasses.
Amazing. 🙏🙏🙏
Great presentation!!
Great speech..
So inspiring
i really enjoyed this and learned alot.
Thank you for sharing your insights.
That camera work needed adjustments. When they cut away to the fullscreen images it completely messed me up and I had no idea what he was talking about. they should've done partial images
Great talk!
Excellent!
The camera angles need to be better. It cut off the sign around the 4min mark
It was published on my birthday
Nice video..
Fix these captions. It's ridiculous that you would have inaccurate auto-generated captions on a video about accessibility.
Love!!
Can you upload more accurate captions? Thank you!!
Can you please correct some of the typos in the closed captioning? I know its six years ago lol!
The camera is not Deaf friendly. Parts of the signing is missing.
nice
🤣 4:55
Spanish subtitles please
ىىى ء
The comedy is unnecessary and in some ways offensive. The case examples are poor.
leakysub what examples would you suggest?
I personally enjoyed the humour.
I would like to know what was offensive as well.