[BlindMath] SPSS
Steve Jacobson
steve.jacobson at outlook.com
Fri Sep 13 14:21:17 UTC 2019
Jonathan,
While I agree with the points you have made and you have addressed this in general, I am wondering if anybody has advice for Jeanie regarding the use of SPSS specifically? Are there things about using SPSS with JAWS that may not be obvious?
Jeanie, an obvious question is whether the student is using a relatively recent version of JAWS. As much as I understand the restrictions of upgrade costs, so often I have seen students using incredibly old version of JAWS that may not support some of the accessibility built into software. Of course, there may be different issues here as well, I obviously don't know.
Best regards,
Steve Jacobson
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath <blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Godfrey, Jonathan via BlindMath
Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2019 6:34 PM
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Godfrey, Jonathan <A.J.Godfrey at massey.ac.nz>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] SPSS
Hello Lynn and all,
I really struggle to work out what to say to people who try to work with inaccessible software without expressing quite a lot of personal frustration. I've read Sina's message on using a Mac just now for inspiration on how to say something nicely. I'm not sure I can manage to match it, but there are things that need to be discussed.
Yes, there is plenty of software that is not working for blind people.
In addition though, I suggest that we have quite a few problems with software that are our fault, not the fault of the software itself.
- We do not learn from the experiences of others. All too often, I see people run the same experiments that lead to a failure and report it is if it was something unknown to the experts. I regularly check to see what comes up when I search for "statistics software blind" and rearrangements; the list is pretty good on Google today although this might be seen as blatant self-promotion. <smiles>
- We have resources that present information that was accurate at the time of writing but has gone stale. This is unfortunate as what worked for someone ten years ago is often assumed to still work.
- We have blind people claiming that software is accessible when it is not. Often this is because we have a power user making a claim that is not appropriate for a novice.
- We have blind people who do not know how to use the tools they do have. I see this most often as a consequence of not knowing how to use their chosen screen reader properly. All too often, this is then blamed on the mainstream software.
- We have blind people using the wrong blindness tools for a job. I've seen students using new equipment that they shouldn't have purchased in the first place. As an aside, I see this happen for many sighted students too, but that doesn't make it OK.
- I've seen far too many people with low-vision struggle because they haven't yet worked out that working sighted is harder than working blind. Thankfully, the contrary is also true because I have met low-vision students who use braille and print interchangeably.
- We have let ourselves be supported so much that our first port of call is a disability support service. This is good in a student's first year of university, but employers don't offer such services. Perhaps the biggest problem here is that the onus of support gets shifted from the teaching department onto the disability support staff. With respect to STEM subjects that is often a recipe for sub-optimal results. I have to say though that I receive about as many requests for assistance from the three groups of people - students themselves (best in my opinion), their teaching staff (good, but even better if this has followed a conversation with the student), and disability support staff (OK, but I see this as a backstop measure and while helpful, I still think it is far from ideal).
- We have not complained about inaccessible software enough. Vendors continue to sell their inaccessible products to universities, sometimes with false information about the accessibility of their software. No one complains so nothing changes. Universities continue to purchase substandard software because they don't know any better.
- we do not have reliable systems for sharing the knowledge we do have. If we did, the above list would be considerably shorter.
- there is very limited resource to assist every blind student in need by way of comprehensive support. It is over five years since anyone fully funded me to assist blind students. The only way I've managed to do so is to seek research funding and claim that my interactions with the students benefit my work or to piggy back workshops around conference travel.
On the bright side:
- there are numerous people who are looking out for blind people's needs in STEM subjects. This is the season for people making contact with me. I can report that I've handled a dozen requests in the last month alone.
- there are software solutions that do work for blind people doing statistics courses. R and SAS are the only two that get any real support for blind people. A student using anything else does so at their own peril; a student who does so without the support of their teaching staff does themselves no good at all.
- Publicly available accessible resources to support students and teaching staff do exist.
Please note: this is not a get at Lynn message. I've seen too many people just like Lynn and unless something changes, there will be another one soon. I actually think it is well past the time when blind people ourselves stood up and said that the current way things are working is not working for us. We need to do so knowing what we're doing well, and what we're not doing so well though.
Jonathan
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath <blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Lynn Wilson via BlindMath
Sent: Friday, 13 September 2019 4:06 AM
To: 'Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics' <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Lynn Wilson <admin at nadp-uk.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] SPSS
Hi
I spent a lot of time trying to assist a blind student use Jaws and SPSS. We eventually got in a specialist VI trainer who set the systems so most were workable with copying and pasting to a document so she could read the data.
Even then she required sighted assistance for some tasks. I was later advised that it would be better to use R Statistics from the R project.
https://nam02.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.r-project.org%2F&data=02%7C01%7C%7C273589f5d850423fe6ab08d737d9f0c6%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C637039281493164586&sdata=lhtaZMxvu7o938aZ8ReybdIUC7JLgGyKXFOrbfN4wiA%3D&reserved=0
Hope this helps
Lynn
Lynn Wilson AMNADP
Operations Manager
National Association of Disability Practitioners Ltd Lansdowne Building, 2 Lansdowne Rd. East Croydon, CR9 2ER Tel. 02082636220; Mobile: 07984405456
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-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath <blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Jeannie Massay via BlindMath
Sent: 30 August 2019 03:59
To: BlindMath at nfbnet.org
Cc: Jeannie Massay <jmassay1 at cox.net>
Subject: [BlindMath] SPSS
Hello all-
Does anyone have experience using SPSS and JAWS? When installing the program asks if you are using JAWS. However the menus and thus, the program seems to be inaccessible. Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks,
Jeannie
Jeannie Massay, President
National Federation of the Blind of Oklahoma
405-600-0695
president at nfbok.org
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