Dragon Naturally Speaking seems to be /the/ leader in the field and a
product that works as well as any other you will find.
--Michael T. Bendorf--
Technology Administrator
A-C Central C.U.S.D. #262
217.476.3312 ext. 2019
DID #: 217.476.6019
Cellular: 217.306.6824

"I'm trying to teach myself to ask the same questions that you do during
your lectures so that I do not need you any more."

A good teacher is like a candle - it consumes itself to light the way for
others.

"The computer revolution hasn't started yet. Don't be misled by the enormous
flow of money into bad defacto standards for unsophisticated buyers using
poor adaptations of incomplete ideas."

- Alan Kay



On Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 11:16 AM, JimHays <[email protected]> wrote:

> Is anyone using voice recognition software with special needs students?  We
> have a high school student who has severe physical limitations - I think he
> has Muscular Dystrophy.   He is taking a high school composition class where
> the students do a lot of writing.  We are looking into the feasibility of
> getting him a laptop with voice recognition software and I was wondering if
> anyone has tried this.
> What works?  What doesn't work?
>
> I am reading that the built-in voice recognition in Windows 7 is pretty
> good but I think that I would want a "little more" for a project like this -
> possibly Dragon Naturally Speaking.
> So does anyone do something like this?
>
>
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