Educational
This category reflects all aspects of education in the areas of universal design.
NAHB's course: Universal Design/Build
Wednesday, February 29 2012 at 12:39PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
This blog is an announcement and the body of text that follows is copied from NAHB's website:
UNIVERSAL DESIGN/BUILD
This two-day course focuses on integrated home design features and product specifications that account for client differences due to circumstance, physical characteristics, health issues and aging. Universal Design/Build expands on the previous CAPS (Certified Aging-in-Place Specialist) courses by changing the focus from specific modifications to meet the needs of one person to
Dragon
Thursday, June 16 2011 at 02:03PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Much assistive technology ends up benefitting us all; fax machines and closed captioning are two biggies. Yet another one is making it big: speech-to-text, also known as speech or voice recognition software. Originally designed as an alternative input device specific to the challenges of typing, it now is increasingly used as a business productivity tool. Just yesterday, an acquaintance was using it to capture meeting notes.
The winner software in this category is Dragon. You talk, it types. Us
Surviving Snow & Ice: GETTING AROUND
Thursday, February 10 2011 at 07:46PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
The best design for getting around during the season of snow and ice is to set yourself up so that your mobility is as safe and easy as possible. For starters, try not to be out and about when conditions are treacherous. This means having what you need before the bad weather strikes (see the section on preparation). If you must go out, allow extra time – no rushing or mad dashes; go slower and with added mindfulness. Travel during daylight, not at night. Give snow and ice removal services
Surviving Snow & Ice: SNOW REMOVAL
Tuesday, February 01 2011 at 05:53AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Snow and ice spell trouble, maybe danger, probably extra work, and certainly limits to mobility. Hardest hit won’t be those who live in snow country and are used to it, but those who live in the marginal areas that rarely get snow or ice. Overcoming the inconveniences of snow requires preparation. This series of posts provides checklists to help you create and prepare for a better winter experience.
Snow Removal
The snow is falling (a lot this winter) and you are inside all cozy and rela
Surviving Snow & Ice: PREPARING FOR WINTER
Monday, January 24 2011 at 04:02PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
PREPARING FOR WINTER
Overcoming the inconveniences of snow requires preparation. This series of posts provides checklists to help you create and prepare for a better winter experience. The posts in this series are: Universal Design for Winter, Preparing For Winter, Snow Removal, Getting Around, and, New Home Construction.
Preparing For Winter
No matter how well we design for our survival (and comfort), nature can always out-do us, reminding us to be humble, thoughtful … and prepared.
Surviving Snow & Ice: UNIVERSAL DESIGN FOR WINTER
Wednesday, January 19 2011 at 09:14PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Snow and ice spell trouble, maybe danger, probably extra work, and certainly limits to mobility. Hardest hit won’t be those who live in snow country and are used to it, but those who live in the marginal areas that rarely get snow or ice. Overcoming the inconveniences of snow requires preparation. This series of posts provides checklists to help you create and prepare for a better winter experience. The posts in this series are: Universal Design for Winter, Preparing For Winter, Snow Remov
The Five Year Plan
Wednesday, December 15 2010 at 08:58PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Do you have a five-year plan? As it is close to New Years, how about a one-year plan for 2011? Those who make a plan are much more likely to achieve their goals than those who don’t. What about your company, what’s their plan? How about your country? Still with me? Or have you clicked outta here?
Go have a look at India’s Five Year Plans (Wikipedia link); maybe just look at the recent plan, the Eleventh 2007-2012 (scroll down). This is a country on the move. This is a country
Grave to Cradle
Tuesday, November 30 2010 at 11:30PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
The provocateur speaking… What if universal design prevents a very important part of life, that of connecting with our elders. The ideal is ongoing independence, and it is voiced most strongly by those who will retire soon, but what if we are too successful? What if old age becomes just older versions of middle age?
For many, retirement is a lot different today than years ago. It’s no longer a few years to live; it can be as many as twenty or thirty! It’s no longer a ro
OMG: You’re Such an Ableist!
Tuesday, November 23 2010 at 05:25PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Said by a builder, “That ADA stuff isn’t good for anything anyway; no body uses it.” Said by coach, “Well, if you can’t stand for long periods, maybe you shouldn’t be a lab technician.” Said by a teacher, “Why should I give you extra time to take the test!” These are the cries of an ableist.
I would imagine that ableist comments come from a place of ignorance, and perhaps of resentment. It might appear as if special accommodations are given
Emergency Planning
Friday, October 23 2009 at 03:56PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
We know the emergency prep basics but what would make them more universal design? The short answer is, not much. If you have a universal design environment, you’re in good shape. Where emergency planning might be more universal design is in its thorough application and in you actually being prepared.
Emergency preparedness is like flossing: we know what it is and how to do it, but, we don’t. My favorite guideline for flossing is this, floss only the teeth you want to keep. Emergency
Driving
Wednesday, October 21 2009 at 02:40AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
For most Americans, driving is the primary access to a world beyond our doors. It gets us to work, it gets the kids to school, it helps us shop, go to worship and socialize. When driving isn’t an option, chances are you just entered a different world called isolation.
The automobile is amazing and highly effective. We can afford them, and it serves us all pretty well. A large number of physical limitations do not affect our ability to drive, as a result we continue to be mobile. So, what
Geriatric II
Friday, October 09 2009 at 09:16PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
With forethought and planning, you can recognize and then optimize the ability to enjoy life, reduce chances of hospitalization or institutionalization, and continue independent living. This might be for yourself or for someone you care for such as a parent, spouse or sibling. Consider this endeavor as meaningful as having a life savings and a fully paid mortgage.
Where To Begin:
- Start with an overview: Are there changes in physical or mental health? What medications are being taken, and as
Education Saved the Day
Wednesday, September 30 2009 at 04:50PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Long, long ago, in a distant galaxy, around 2006, a Google search for universal design would give you under three million results. Today, it’s 41,200,000! This is a fast growing field as we prepare for a planet with an older population. Students considering career choices: look into universal design! This is for those of you who wish to be an early adopter and position yourself at the front of the curve – a simple advantage that only requires you to start soon. Great opportunity to i
Born Again
Friday, September 11 2009 at 10:03PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Have you raised a child?
I often wonder what I learned in school that was so great: geometry, endless history, exotic authors, extreme science? After years of school there was so much practical stuff that I didn’t know: how to cook, nutrition, conflict resolution, and child rearing. Simply bizarre, even absurd, that it was assumed that I would instinctually know what to do when shepherding a little being along the path to adulthood. Well, the good thing about school is that I did learn wh
New Baby vs New Elder
Friday, June 05 2009 at 05:34PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
A bit of a rant today:
It’s getting to be years ago that I was looking at bookshelves filled with books on having a baby, bringing a baby home, what to do with a baby when it’s home, what to expect next; what it’s expressing and when, how-to this and that. Then the parents, and what they are going through and how they can handle it. I still see that bookshelf at bookstores, how could I not? It’s one of the bigger shelves in the store.
But I go now in search of a differe
The 8th Principle, Part I
Friday, March 20 2009 at 02:32PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
An eighth principle would be a welcome and needed entry to the brilliant seven as created in 1997 by the North Carolina State University’s Center for Universal Design. Rather than only define the environment of a user, this eighth principle would address perception; those shared by the observer and the observed. How do we see others and how do they see us? Can we build in a way that levels the perceptual playing field in which all players are seen as equal?
I was recently asked if the New
$10 or $1000, Choose
Friday, March 13 2009 at 12:00PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Last week I wrote about visitability. Today I’m surfing the ‘net and discover in the Justice for All blog that the Inclusive Home Design Act (IHDA) has been reintroduced in the House by U.S. Representative Jan Schakowsky. On a metaphysical note: start thinking and speaking the world you wish to have, and it will show up.
This legislative history of visitability begins with Eleanor Smith who formed the advocacy organization, Concrete Change; she has been unwavering in her commitment
Vistability
Thursday, March 05 2009 at 05:14AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Visitability is on my mind this week. My parents last visited me in my 1906 brownstone five years ago for a Christmas dinner; it is no longer possible for them to visit. My home is not visitable; only a crazy amount of cash would make it so. For a resident with limited mobility, my home would be a prison.
So what were builders in an affluent neighborhood thinking back in 1906? The answer is simple; life expectancy was under 50! A whole range health conditions typical in a much older population
CAPS - Certified Aging In Place Specialist
Thursday, February 26 2009 at 02:58PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Hooray! I am a CAPS graduate. What’s so different? Through manuals, instruction, discussion and testing, I added to my knowledge (even me, Mr. know-it-all). And, I am very excited.
CAPS is an acronym for Certified Aging In Place Specialist. It is a three-day training and certification course offered by NAHB, National Association of Home Builders. One day is devoted to general business management for builders; the other two days provide aging-in-place training in both marketing and communi
More than Your House ... Your Money!
Friday, June 06 2008 at 12:45PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Another area of self evaluation will be your economic forecast. Most simply, will there be enough financial resources for you to live the way you wish to live? Managing your assets always mattered, however, the retirement model you grew up with has little remaining practical value. To retire at age 65 and to have a nice life for the next 20 years requires a crazy amount of money – think millions (you might have less than $50,000.00 cash). Or, you’ll considerably scale back your lifes
Topics
- All Blogs
- Assistive Devices & Technology
- Baby Boomers
- Bathroom
- Educational
- Home Improvement / Construction
- Kitchen
- Maintenance
- Medical
- Most Informative
- Most Popular
- Most Provocative
- Most Surprising
- Multi-Media (video, radio, podcast)
- Nature
- Politics & Governance
- Spirituality
- Top 10 Lists & General Lists
- Travel
- Universal Design
View by Month
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- October 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- June 2010
- January 2010
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008

