[Blindmath] Calculus for blind students
Ben Humphreys
brh at opticinspiration.org
Mon Aug 15 15:18:23 UTC 2011
Hello,
As a formerly sighted college student, I now find myself in the
position of returning to school for a graduate degree and as part of
that process, I must take 3 semesters of calculus. I wanted to reach
out to folks on this list to find out what works and what doesn't. I
seem to have discovered a lot of dead-ends when it comes to
accessible math technology and I'd like to cut to the chase and find
out what's currently available and working.
So here are a few resources I've found which look promising and a few
that didn't:
1. The text Essential Calculus is available from Learning Ally as a
Daisy Download. I believe this is the text used by my
university. Can I expect the Learning Ally version to be read by a
human? Are the figures and graphs described verbally?
2. Latex looks interesting as a way to write and print calculus
problems. The edsharp editor has a mode for reading latex formulas
in a more friendly manner than the actual latex code. I envision
using this solution to do homework problems and exams, with the
benefit of a portable printer or by e-mailing the instructor either
the latex file or a PDF of the rendered output.
3. I have a Tiger Viewplus Spotdot embosser which I can use to make
tactile graphics, provided I can get those graphics as a PDF or
web-pageor similar.
4. MathReader for reading MathML markup has so far been a bust. It
appears to only work with IE6 and IE7, now unavailable. Too bad as
this would have given me the ability to render latex formulas to a
format readable by both myself and my instructors.
5. The Calculus for Blind students developed by CUNY and Professor
Albert Blank seems to have been promising back in the late 1990s but
many of their solutions, such as use of the Nomad tablet and Aster's
audio rendering of math content seem to no longer be maintained or available.
6. As to the Nemeth code, I'm currently learning grade I braille as
a 40-something which is obviously hard enough without the benefit of
a plastic brain such as possessed by a typical elementary school
child. So learning grade II then Nemeth is probably going to take
quite a while longer than I want to delay my studies for. If
possible, I'd like to rely on audio and electronic solutions as much
as practical.
7. What, if any, is the current state-of-the-art solution for
learning calculus as a newly blind student with a good, though dated,
background in math? I wonder if there are courses specifically
designed for this that I could take at an online university and then
transfer to my school instead of reinventing the wheel?
Any solutions and encouragement greatly appreciated.
Thank you
Ben Humphreys
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