[blindkid] 4th Grade Math and introduction of technology

Debra Baxley debrabaxley at bellsouth.net
Tue Feb 3 15:47:18 UTC 2009


Somehow, doing Math with the Perkins brailler causes the concepts to be
understood better because of the physical movement on the page.  Because I
did Math with a Perkins brailler, I can now type a Math problem in print
because I understand the formatting so well.  

Debra

-----Original Message-----
From: blindkid-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindkid-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Tene Gibson
Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2009 7:50 AM
To: NFBnet Blind Kid Mailing List,(for parents of blind children)
Subject: Re: [blindkid] 4th Grade Math and introduction of technology

How do we lessen the frustration?  Although I may agree some repitition, I
believe that in some circles that the "drilling" method, even in children
with sight, has been proven defunct.  Lord knows both of my children hold to
the standard "I did that already and I am not doing it again."  Na'im has no
problem identifying the  concept of math or the process it takes to get from
point A to point B.  The issue is when do we move in the 21st century? When
do we grasp what we have available in the schools as far as technology is
concerned?  I learned how to start a fire by rubbing sticks, but I still
prefer matches or a lighter.

Tene




________________________________
From: Mike Freeman <k7uij at panix.com>
To: "NFBnet Blind Kid Mailing List, (for parents of blind children)"
<blindkid at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, February 2, 2009 11:11:53 PM
Subject: Re: [blindkid] 4th Grade Math and introduction of technology

Depends upon the child. However, I am of the opinion that all that 
Perkins brailler math time will stand him in good stead in the years to 
come. It has been my observation that the only blind kids and adults who 
truly grasp and are facile with arithmetic and, to some extent, with 
higher math such as algebra and, later on, the calculus, used the 
Perkins brailler to work the problems out in the same way they would 
were they sighted.

Yes, it's frustrating. But no one ever said blindness wasn't an infernal 
nuisance.

Mike Freeman

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tene Gibson" <g_tene305 at yahoo.com>
To: "BVI-parents" <bvi-parents at yahoogroups.com>; "(for parents of blind 
children) NFBnet Blind Kid Mailing List" <blindkid at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Monday, February 02, 2009 12:36 PM
Subject: [blindkid] 4th Grade Math and introduction of technology


Thanks to NCLB, I am finding that my 9yo is getting caught up in the 
crunch to meet certain benchmarks with his sighted peers. Although I 
believe my child is an exceptionally bright child, I am sensing that he 
is stressed out by long division and multiplication (lining up problems 
on the Perkins being the main culprit). He is a type A personality so 
perfection is his goal and he gets caught up in the nuances of the 
problem set up instead of getting the answer. From a sighted 
perspective, I can understand his angst when having to go up, down, 
left, right, and sideways on a Perkins just for one problem alone and 
sometimes having to start all over if not lined up correctly. All we do 
with Math is erase with a pencil eraser.

My question I guess is when is the right to introduce technology into 
the classroom curriculum. He is one and half years shy of being in 
middle school. I have the Duxbury software, the screen reader, the 
notetaker, and the embosser. When can we put Perkins down for limited 
use.

Tene



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