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By Joe Guy Collier
For almost three years, Karl Smith has been dead
set on making a success out of his software company,
Accelerations Educational Software. He's blown
through his savings, run up large credit card
bills and tested the patience of his wife and
family.
Now, Smith said he's passed a turning point for
the company, which
he started because of a need he saw in his own
household. Smith, who has a 7-year-old son with
autism, began Accelerations Software to write
computer programs for children with autism and
learning disabilities.
The company's product, called the Discrete Trial
Trainer, or DT Trainer, uses learning modules
specifically designed to help these children pick
up fundamental building blocks, such as letters,
numbers, colors and objects. If you saw Smith's
office today, you might not realize how far his
company has come.
He and a few part-time employees share a modest
1,000-square-foot
office in downtown Columbia. Inside, a homemade
wooden booth serves as the recording studio to
make voice-overs for the software. But if you
saw where Smith was a year and half ago, you'd
realize the progress he's made.
Until last May, Smith had been running Accelerations
Educational Software out of the room above his
garage. He had a handful of schools using the
DT Trainer software, which can be previewed at
www.dttrainer.com.
Smith now has almost 50 school districts, spanning
from Hawaii to
New York, using his software. Kim Kulka, coordinator
of the autism program at Mountain View Elementary
School in Marietta, Ga., has been using the software
for two years.
The DT Trainer motivates children with autism
to learn, Kulka said. It allows these children
to pick up skills without requiring the usual
one-on-one attention of a teacher, she said. "It's
been extremely helpful," Kulka said. "I'm
hoping for more programs."
James Bender, special education technology specialist
with Silver
Consolidated Schools in Silver City, N.M., has
been using the DT Trainer for a year. The software
immediately engaged the children, Bender said.
In a test trial of the software, a Silver City
student spent 25 minutes and then 40 minutes working
through the programs, he said. "It was a
phenomenal thing because this was a child that
had trouble sitting still for more than 30 seconds,"
Bender said.
Smith's personal knowledge of children with autism
and developmental
needs can be seen in the software, he said. "It's
software with soul," Bender said. "It
goes to the fact that it comes from within Karl."
Smith said he hopes to put the software into
more schools. In the last year, his company has
developed training material so teachers and parents
can use the software without his assistance. Smith
also has cut the price of the software by more
than half to $99 for individuals and $249 for
schools. As a promotional effort, the first license
for a school district is free.
Revenues are improving and the cash flow is less
erratic, Smith said. But the company continues
to search for a financial backer so it can market
the product more heavily, he said. "It would
be good to find an investor who isn't looking
for a1,000-percent return," Smith said, "somebody
who wants to make a nice return but also wants
to have a social impact." Even without a
major investor, though, Smith said he'll push
forward on what he can afford. "We'll do
it one way or the other," he said. "We're
going to find a way of succeeding and making this
grow."
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