[Blindmath] Blindmath Digest, Vol 51, Issue 5
Susan Mooney
susanannemooney at gmail.com
Tue Oct 12 14:22:18 UTC 2010
You're paying for this work? If you are paying you have recourse. If you
are using volunteers, this is the nasty chance you take. When it comes to
brailling textbooks, you want to use a top notch company which guarantees
their work and will be able to give you a timeline for completion of the
work. In these instances, you get what you pay for. If someone's working
for free or extremely low pay, there's absolutely no incentive to finish the
work on time for you. As the kids say, "Jus' sayin', ya know?"
Try getting in touch with Davey at Braille Plus, Inc.: www.brailleplus.net
SM
On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 8:29 AM, <cnsbaker at access.k12.wv.us> wrote:
> The student I work with is having difficulty getting their books for their
> college algebra course they are taking in high school. We knew there was
> going to be a textbook change (and knowing there wasn't a braille version of
> the previous edition either) when they signed up for this course. We got the
> ISBN number from the publisher and ordered the book 1 1/2 years ago.
>
> We began receiving volumes 4 months after we replaced the order and was
> excited that we might actually have the testbook for the course. For
> whatever reason the transcribers stopped working on it. Then almost a year
> later, when the student began taking the course we began making calls and
> begging for the other volumes, which have never been finished. We have
> gotten enough volumes through the end of chapter 4 (this course covers 12
> chapters). We have enough to get us through this week actually.
>
> The course is over in Dec and their college tri class begins in Jan. Of
> course if they cannot complete this course they cannot be enrolled in the
> class for next semester. By the time we get the entire set, I will have done
> the majority of the transcription on the textbook just so the student can
> keep up in class.
>
> I agree this is totally sickening and it is sad to say but has been the
> pattern throughout this students entire education, and I know it is the
> pattern for everyone in the area of education.
>
> Constanza S. Baker
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Susan Mooney <susanannemooney at gmail.com>
> Date: Saturday, October 9, 2010 3:09 pm
> Subject: Re: [Blindmath] Blindmath Digest, Vol 51, Issue 5
> To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics <
> blindmath at nfbnet.org>
>
>
> > "I have a massive mid-term in Statistics on Tuesday and I just got the
> > accessible
> > version of the textbook today!" As a professional transcriber and a
> > former
> > teacher of the blind, that makes me sick. I am not going to get into
> > a
> > debate here on education, accessibility, etc. as this isn't the forum
> > for
> > that, but ... it's sickening. If this happened to sighted students,
> > there
> > would be such an uproar, it would be deafening.
> >
> > SM
> > _______________________________________________
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> >
>
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