![]() ![]() It was also quite easy to open that PDF up from Dropbox, so I would guess that one should be able to open PDFs or other image files from other sources as well. That’s to allow one to fix any errors if need be. You’ll see the cursor on the page and the keyboard along with it. Will Prizmo be able to make it readable with few to no errors? Let’s start with a nicely scanned PDF that a professor may have put on Blackboard without running OCR herself. So this app sounds great, but how well does it work? How good does the image quality need to be for the optical character recognition (OCR) engine to accurately translate the image into text? How well does it read? How easy is it to export the documents to other apps or cloud storage? I put Prizmo through its paces and here’s what I found. (Please note that our students should always be able to get accessible e-text. Maybe your instructor posted a reading as an image PDF rather than a searchable one? Open it in Prizmo and make it accessible. Stuck with a reading on paper rather than listening to accessible e-text? Use Prizmo page by page. A professor hands out an exercise or reading in class and you need to listen to it? Open up Prizmo, snap a photo, and plug in the headphones. One can easily think of the times this might be useful for a dyslexic student. Since I’m most familiar with our students with dyslexia, I’ll focus here on its applications for them. The user takes a photo of a document, the app converts it into text, and then it allows one to hear it read aloud or save it as a searchable PDF.Īn older version of Prizmo is reviewed with similar apps in this article from a couple years ago that focuses on blind users. Prizmo for iOS is a leading scan and read app that may be useful for those of us with dyslexia or visual impairments.
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