“OPEN: the Journal” – an app designed to help close the word gap

Created for:

  • Digital Media Design for Learning (DMDL) degree; Cognitive Science and Educational Technology I course (Spring 2014).

Project length:

  • Medium-long (approx. last quarter of the term, final group project design document).

Team:

  • Saira Mallick
  • Matt McGowan
    • my principle contributions: “Background,” “Problem Description,” “Delivery Platform” and “Project Narrative.”
  • Ruth Sherman
  • Shalini Shroff

Challenge:

  • As a group, produce a full, thorough design document on a project of mutual interest.

A few years ago, I read Maryanne Wolf’s Proust and the Squid (2007) and was floored to learn (amongst other things) that

[a] prominent [1995] study found that by kindergarten, a gap of 32 million words already separates some children in linguistically impoverished homes from their more stimulated peers. In other words, in some environments the average young middle-class child hears 32 million more spoken words than the young underprivileged child by age five. (p. 20)

In class, I was fortunate to have three other classmates become interested enough in this “word gap” to work on a project together. What we came up with was a mobile application titled “OPEN: the Journal.”

The main goals of this design are to:

  1. promote the sustainability of programs such as the Thirty Million Words Initiative, and
  2. support approaches learned in initial interventions–i.e. engaging in conversations with young children and speaking to children using a larger number and a greater variety of words.

The full design document can be found here:

“OPEN – the Journal” design document

Grant proposal excerpt (the Child Mind Institute Biobank)

I spent several years working in the not-for-profit world working as a grant writer. This is an excerpt of a larger grant proposal I wrote for the Child Mind Institute’s Biobank:

[C]omprised of data from 10,000 New York City area children and adolescents (ages 5-21)…[t]he Healthy Brain Network Biobank houses data about psychiatric, behavioral, cognitive, and lifestyle (e.g., fitness, diet) phenotypes, as well as multimodal brain imaging, electroencephalography, digital voice and video recordings, genetics, and actigraphy. Beyond accelerating transdiagnostic research, we discuss the potential of the Healthy Brain Network Biobank to advance related areas, such as biophysical modeling, voice and speech analysis, natural viewing fMRI and EEG, and methods optimization.

http://fcon_1000.projects.nitrc.org/indi/cmi_healthy_brain_network/About.html

Grant proposal excerpt – CMI Biobank