Alexicom Tech wins bid for Phoenix Union
High School District over DynaVox
Story by Kim Covington for KPNX News 12, Sept. 14, 2009
Tool helps autistic students speak
Alexicom on School Solutions
by Kim Covington - Oct. 9, 2008 07:43 AM
(transcript)
Alex is 9 years old and stopped speaking at two. He can't talk because he
has autism. Sometimes mom and dad can understand he is anxious. Sometimes they can't. Alexicom
co-founder Fredi Lajvardi says,” It's very overwhelming. It's every parent’s desire to want to make
things easier for their child. You don't want to see your child in pain or suffering."
So Pam and Fredi Lajvardi
developed a new way communicating. Fredi Lajvardi is a teacher at Carl Hayden High School
and an award-winning robotics coach. He took those skills and contacts in technology, got help
from Alex's speech pathologists and together they developed Alexicom Tech. Named after their son,
the internet picture-based system is designed to unlock that frustrating world that non-verbal
people like Alex experience.
Alex touches the computer screen and the software says,” I am hungry.
I want to eat…chocolate." Fredi Lajvardi says,” It's another way for child or student to have a voice."
Here's how Alexicom works:
it provides pictures or you can create your own. The student uses the pictures to create a
communication page and with the voice output, simply touches the screen on his computer, iPod,
any device. It's designed for use at home, school, the hospital... on the go. Alex touches the
screen and the software says, ”I want to run.” Speech pathologist Staci Neustadt says, ”You want
to run? Let's go.”
And for Alex,
being able to communicate means fewer outbursts, less stress. Alexicom costs $40 a month. And the
Lajvardis are talking with school districts across the valley to get the device in the classroom.
But they want to stress the internet-based software is available to anyone, anywhere.