Grant Meredith
Federation University Australia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Grant Meredith.
Journal of Fluency Disorders | 2011
Ann Packman; Grant Meredith
UNLABELLED The World Wide Web (WWW) was 20 years old last year. Enormous amounts of information about stuttering are now available to anyone who can access the Internet. Compared to 20 years ago, people who stutter and their families can now make more informed choices about speech-language interventions, from a distance. Blogs and chat rooms provide opportunities for people who stutter to share their experiences from a distance and to support one another. New technologies are also being adopted into speech-language pathology practice and service delivery. Telehealth is an exciting development as it means that treatment can now be made available to many rural and remotely located people who previously did not have access to it. Possible future technological developments for speech-language pathology practice include Internet based treatments and the use of Virtual Reality. Having speech and CBT treatments for stuttering available on the Internet would greatly increase their accessibility. Second Life also has exciting possibilities for people who stutter. EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES The reader will (1) explain how people who stutter and their families can get information about stuttering from the World Wide Web, (2) discuss how new technologies have been applied in speech-language pathology practice, and (3) summarize the principles and practice of telehealth delivery of services for people who stutter and their families.
International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology | 2012
Grant Meredith; Ann Packman; Gen É E Marks
Abstract The aim of this study was to ascertain the extent to which Australian public universities and their associated disability liaison services offer web-based information for current or prospective students who stutter. The disability pages of the websites of all 39 public universities in Australia were visited and the information about disability services assessed according to 12 criteria developed by the authors. Results indicate that there is a dearth of information on Australian university websites available for students or prospective students who stutter. Only 13% of the sites reported any form of alternative teaching and assessment procedures for speech-impaired students and only 51% of 39 disability liaison officers responded when contacted by email. Such a student could not make an informed choice to enrol in a university based upon the information on disability services available on public Australian university websites.
Journal of Fluency Disorders | 2011
Ann Packman; Grant Meredith
UNLABELLED The World Wide Web (WWW) was 20 years old last year. Enormous amounts of information about stuttering are now available to anyone who can access the Internet. Compared to 20 years ago, people who stutter and their families can now make more informed choices about speech-language interventions, from a distance. Blogs and chat rooms provide opportunities for people who stutter to share their experiences from a distance and to support one another. New technologies are also being adopted into speech-language pathology practice and service delivery. Telehealth is an exciting development as it means that treatment can now be made available to many rural and remotely located people who previously did not have access to it. Possible future technological developments for speech-language pathology practice include Internet based treatments and the use of Virtual Reality. Having speech and CBT treatments for stuttering available on the Internet would greatly increase their accessibility. Second Life also has exciting possibilities for people who stutter. EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES The reader will (1) explain how people who stutter and their families can get information about stuttering from the World Wide Web, (2) discuss how new technologies have been applied in speech-language pathology practice, and (3) summarize the principles and practice of telehealth delivery of services for people who stutter and their families.
Changing demands, changing directions, the 28th Annual Conference of the Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education (ASCILITE 2011), Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 04-07 December 2011 / G. Williams, P. Statham, N. Brown and B. Cleland (eds.) | 2011
Brent Gregory; Sue Gregory; Denise Wood; Yvonne Masters; M Hillier; Frederick Stokes-Thompson; Anton Bogdanovych; Des Butler; Lyn Hay; Jay Jay Jegathesan; Kim Flintoff; Stefan Schutt; Dale Linegar; Robyn Alderton; Andrew Cram; Ieva Stupans; Lindy Orwin; Grant Meredith; Debbie McCormick; Francesca Collins; Jenny Grenfell; Jason Zagami; Allan Ellis; Lisa Jacka; John Campbell; Ian Larson; A Fluck; Angela Thomas; Helen Farley; Nona Muldoon
ASCILITE 2014 : Proceeding of the 31st Annual Conference of the Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education | 2014
Sue Gregory; Des Butler; S. de Freitas; Lisa Jacka; Patricia S. Crowther; Torsten Reiners; Scott Grant; Grant Meredith; Jason Zagami; Stefan Schutt; P. Rive; Brent Gregory; Sarah Pasfield-Neofitou; Helen Farley; Frederick Stokes-Thompson; Clare Atkins; Lincoln C. Wood; Chris Campbell; Caroline Steel; Suku Sukunesan; K. Le Rossignol; Xiangyu Wang; Denise Wood; Merle Hearns; Ian Warren; Robert J. Cox; Marcus McDonald; Jenny Sim; M Hillier; Jay Jay Jegathesan
ASCILITE 2013: 30th International Conference on Innovation, Practice and Research in the Use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education | 2013
Sue Gregory; Brent Gregory; Torsten Reiners; Ali Fardinpour; Mathew Hillier; Mark J. W. Lee; Lisa Jacka; Des Butler; David J. Holloway; Scott Grant; Merle Hearns; Kim Flintoff; Jay Jay Jegathesan; David Ellis; Marcus McDonald; Frederick Stokes-Thompson; Belma Gaukrodger; Jason Zagami; Chris Campbell; Xiangyu Wang; Jamie Garcia Salinas; Swee Kin Loke; Sheila Scutter; Christine Newman; Ning Gu; Stefan Schutt; Helen Farley; Anton Bogdanovych; Tomas Trescak; Simeon J. Simoff
Physics Procedia | 2012
Zhaohao Sun; Junqing Sun; Grant Meredith
Archive | 2011
Charlynn Miller; Mark J. W. Lee; Luke Rogers; Grant Meredith; Blake Peck
Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2015
Grant Meredith; L. Achterbosch
International Journal of Systems and Service-oriented Engineering | 2012
Zhaohao Sun; Grant Meredith; Andrew Stranieri