Captioned Educational Streaming Video on the
Internet
December 2002
Editor: You're probably familiar with the Captioned Media Program,
which has been providing captioned videos to people with hearing loss
for many years. They've now expanded their services to include streaming
captioned videos over the web. This means that you can go to their
website RIGHT NOW and see a captioned video!
Here's the press release.
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The National Association of the Deaf (NAD) announced today that it
would begin the first-ever Internet video streaming of open-captioned
educational videos. No other streamed material of this kind is
captioned. Therefore, 28,000,000 Americans with a hearing loss are the
potential beneficiaries of this historic media event.
"Millions of Americans have been excluded from the Internets
offerings of information, entertainment, and cultural content" said
NAD's Bill Stark. Stark, Director of the Captioned Media Program (CMP),
stated that: "As a U.S. Department of Education-funded program, the
CMP has provided free-loan captioned media to deaf and hard of hearing
persons, their families, and others who work with deaf and hard of
hearing people for over four decades. This through-the-mail service will
now be supplemented by the latest in digital technology."
Consumers will need to have RealPlayer installed on their computers
in order to view the streamed CMP videos. RealPlayer enables a computer
to receive audio and video files. A link to download a free version of
RealPlayer can be found on the CMP Web site. All videos streamed by the
CMP will have open (visible) captions, with no special software needed
for viewing.
Approximately 450 titles will be streamed by the CMP, including
productions such as "Blood, Heart, and Circulation",
"Giant Sea Turtles", "Harriet Tubman and the Underground
Railroad", and "Lassies Great Adventure". There is no
registration fee, and registered users may also borrow from the CMP
collection of over 4,000 open-captioned videos.
About the NAD
Established in 1880, the National Association of the Deaf (NAD) is the
nation's oldest and largest nonprofit organization safeguarding the
accessibility and civil rights of 28 million deaf and hard of hearing
Americans across a broad range of areas including education, employment,
health care, and telecommunications. The NAD is a dynamic federation of
51 state association affiliates including the District of Columbia,
organizational affiliates, and national members. Primary areas of focus
include grassroots advocacy and empowerment, policy development and
research, legal assistance, captioned media, information and
publications, and youth leadership. More information about the NAD is
available at www.nad.org.
About the CMP
The Captioned Media Program (CMP) provides all persons who are deaf or
hard of hearing awareness of and equal access to communication and
learning through the use of captioned educational media and supportive
collateral materials. The Captioned Media Program (CMP) provides
free-loan educational and general interest open-captioned videos to deaf
and hard of hearing individuals as well as teachers, parents, and others
who work with individuals who have a hearing loss. Funding for the
Captioned Media Program is provided by the US Department of Education.
More information about the CMP is available at www.cfv.org.
For more information:
Contact Bill Stark at (800) 237-6213 (W), (864) 585-1905 (H), or bstark@cfv.org.
For an example of a captioned streamed video, visit the CMP Web site at www.cfv.org, choose the Media Room section and view a captioned TV-PSA
segment.