[BlindMath] {Spam?} RE: {Spam?} Re: BlindMath Digest, Vol 170, Issue 1
Susan Osterhaus
osterhauss at tsbvi.edu
Sat Sep 12 20:45:23 UTC 2020
Hi Mary Fran,
I don't have a specific list of Nemeth Code symbols just for statistics.
Statistics uses quite a few of its own specific symbols, but it also uses
many found in other math classes. "Nemeth at a Glance" from TSBVI does have
a nice chart of "Commonly Used Nemeth Mathematics Symbols Arranged by Grade
and Course". The last section is entitled Data Analysis and Probability and
lists symbols commonly used in Advanced Quantitative Reasoning (AQR) and
Statistics (S) classes taught in Texas. However, you will also find a few
Data Analysis & Probability symbols under Grade 7, Geometry, and Algebra II.
You might find this helpful. However, it is not free. To purchase the book
go to:
http://www.tsbvi.edu/store/ecom/index.php?action=ecom.pdetails&mode=nemeth
Other possible free resources for searching for various Nemeth symbols
(although not specifically classified as Statistics):
http://accessibility.pearson.com/nemethdatabase/ (This Nemeth Symbol Library
is currently being updated with more statistics symbols, but this is the
current version available to the public.)
http://accessibility.pearson.com/aee/ (Input the print symbol you need, and
the Nemeth equivalent pops up immediately. Input the Nemeth Symbol, and the
print equivalent pops up immediately.
https://nemeth.aphtech.org/ APH Nemeth Tutorial
Hope something here helps!
Susan
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Anderson,
Mary Fran via BlindMath
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2020 1:23 PM
To: blindmath at nfbnet.org
Cc: Anderson, Mary Fran <MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
Subject: [BlindMath] {Spam?} Re: BlindMath Digest, Vol 170, Issue 1
Dear Blindmath,
Thank you for your response to my questions.
I was wondering if there is a list of specific Nemeth code symbols for
statistics? If so, can you please share those with me.
Thank you.
Mary Fran Anderson
On 9/9/20, 5:02 AM, "BlindMath on behalf of blindmath-request at nfbnet.org"
<blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org on behalf of blindmath-request at nfbnet.org>
wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Math Speak (Anderson, Mary Fran)
2. Re: Math Speak (Bob Mathews)
3. Re: Math Speak (Neil Soiffer)
4. Re: Math Speak (Godfrey, Jonathan)
5. Re: Math Speak (Elizabeth Mohnke)
6. STEM Mentoring Program (Newton Nguyen)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2020 19:32:58 +0000
From: "Anderson, Mary Fran" <MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
To: "blindmath at nfbnet.org" <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Subject: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Message-ID: <441857ED-2675-47A6-BD98-37DD1A955BA5 at contoso.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear Blindmath,
I am working with a blind student enrolled in statistics. I am trying to
help her teacher describe the statistics problems in a way that my student
can understand. I have heard of something called math speak, but I haven?t
been able to find any information regarding this. Can anyone help with this
issue?
Thank you.
Mary Fran Anderson
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2020 14:56:14 -0500
From: Bob Mathews <bob at wiris.com>
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Cc: "Anderson, Mary Fran" <MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Message-ID:
<CAHzAo46F7QfEzKRs_Ac7QqOCGy2W=Gb=On2yFC0e3_J2FpbhDw at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Hello Mary,
MathSpeak is one of the 3 speech styles of MathPlayer, the free math
speech
plugin from Wiris. MathSpeak is described in the MathPlayer User Manual:
https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathplayer/start. If you don't have MathPlayer
yet, there's a download link to MathPlayer 4 in the manual.
It could be you were thinking of ClearSpeak. This was a joint project
between the Educational Testing Service (ETS) and Design Science (now
Wiris), under a US Department of Education Grant. You can find out more
about ClearSpeak from its documentation:
https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathtype/mathtype_desktop/accessibility/clearspeak
.
Regards,
Bob Mathews
Wiris
On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 2:34 PM Anderson, Mary Fran via BlindMath <
blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> Dear Blindmath,
>
> I am working with a blind student enrolled in statistics. I am trying
to
> help her teacher describe the statistics problems in a way that my
student
> can understand. I have heard of something called math speak, but I
haven?t
> been able to find any information regarding this. Can anyone help with
this
> issue?
> Thank you.
> Mary Fran Anderson
> _______________________________________________
> BlindMath mailing list
> BlindMath at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> BlindMath:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/bob%40wiris.com
> BlindMath Gems can be found at <
> http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
>
--
MathType 7 is out! Check the new version at wiris.com/mathtype
<http://www.wiris.com/mathtype?utm_source=emailfooter>
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2020 13:29:13 -0700
From: Neil Soiffer <soiffer at alum.mit.edu>
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Bob Mathews <bob at wiris.com>, "Anderson, Mary Fran"
<MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Message-ID:
<CAESRWkC0CgPEe19H-fwLyJADd_6hgK0cBGgg87q1NR9nX7oN7g at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
A little more info to add to what Bob said...
MathSpeak was developed by Dr. Nemeth so that he could communicate math
well with his assistants. In its pure form, it has a one-to-one
correspondence with the braille code for math that he developed and is
named after him: Nemeth code. You can find some more details at the
seewritehear
website
<https://www.seewritehear.com/accessible-mathml/mathspeak/examples/NemethBook/>.
Because MathSpeak does not speak math the way it is normally spoken in
the
classroom in many cases (e.g., "x superscript 2 baseline plus 1" vs "x
squared plus 1"), GH (now seewritehear) has options to add semantic
interpretation along with verbosity options.
If the student is proficient in Nemeth Code (which he should be),
MathSpeak
might be a reasonable option. I'm not an expert in Nemeth code, but I'll
go
out on a limb and say that a general guideline for the teacher is that
he/she should explicitly name any greek letter and make sure the
beginning
and ending of any 2D notation is obvious when speaking it. When doing
that,
you won't be too far off from what MathSpeak says (exceptions would be
for
nested radicals, fractions, powers, and superscripts, but those are
complicated to understand by just speech in any case). E.g, "fraction 1
over n end fraction"; "chi squared" is fine; "x bar" is ok after
(probably
a few times) saying that "x bar" is written as "x with a line above it".
Neil Soiffer
On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 12:57 PM Bob Mathews via BlindMath <
blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> Hello Mary,
>
> MathSpeak is one of the 3 speech styles of MathPlayer, the free math
speech
> plugin from Wiris. MathSpeak is described in the MathPlayer User
Manual:
> https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathplayer/start. If you don't have
MathPlayer
> yet, there's a download link to MathPlayer 4 in the manual.
>
> It could be you were thinking of ClearSpeak. This was a joint project
> between the Educational Testing Service (ETS) and Design Science (now
> Wiris), under a US Department of Education Grant. You can find out
more
> about ClearSpeak from its documentation:
>
>
https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathtype/mathtype_desktop/accessibility/clearspeak
> .
>
> Regards,
> Bob Mathews
> Wiris
>
> On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 2:34 PM Anderson, Mary Fran via BlindMath <
> blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> > Dear Blindmath,
> >
> > I am working with a blind student enrolled in statistics. I am
trying to
> > help her teacher describe the statistics problems in a way that my
> student
> > can understand. I have heard of something called math speak, but I
> haven?t
> > been able to find any information regarding this. Can anyone help
with
> this
> > issue?
> > Thank you.
> > Mary Fran Anderson
> > _______________________________________________
> > BlindMath mailing list
> > BlindMath at nfbnet.org
> > http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
> > To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info
for
> > BlindMath:
> >
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/bob%40wiris.com
> > BlindMath Gems can be found at <
> > http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
> >
>
> --
>
> MathType 7 is out! Check the new version at wiris.com/mathtype
> <http://www.wiris.com/mathtype?utm_source=emailfooter>
> _______________________________________________
> BlindMath mailing list
> BlindMath at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> BlindMath:
>
>
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/soiffer%40alum.mit.edu
> BlindMath Gems can be found at <
> http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
>
------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2020 21:41:29 +0000
From: "Godfrey, Jonathan" <A.J.Godfrey at massey.ac.nz>
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Message-ID:
<SY3PR01MB11290FD05A2252DB1FE7947E93290 at SY3PR01MB1129.ausprd01.prod.outlook.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hi,
Thanks Neil for the added information. I think it is important to
remember that Dr Nemeth worked in a pre-computational era in mathematics. At
that time, any statistics courses that existed were mathematical in nature.
We're very definitely a comfortable distance from those times...
The question arose from a need to teach statistics. I suggest that there
might therefore be some benefit in all parties (student, teacher, and
support staff) reading a paper Theodor Loots and I wrote five years ago for
the Journal of Statistics Education, entitled "Advice from blind teachers on
how to teach statistics to blind students"
A quite readable pre-print version exists at
https://r-resources.massey.ac.nz/papers/JSE.v23.n3/
While it was written over five years ago, I haven't found anything in
there that I would write much differently today.
In contrast, I've recently looked at a conference paper I delivered in
Japan back in late 2009, and can only reflect that the period of greatest
change in my lifetime in university education of statistics must have
occurred in the period from about 2008 to 2014.
Jonathan
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath <blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Neil Soiffer
via BlindMath
Sent: Wednesday, 9 September 2020 8:29 AM
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Neil Soiffer <soiffer at alum.mit.edu>; Anderson, Mary Fran
<MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] Math Speak
A little more info to add to what Bob said...
MathSpeak was developed by Dr. Nemeth so that he could communicate math
well with his assistants. In its pure form, it has a one-to-one
correspondence with the braille code for math that he developed and is named
after him: Nemeth code. You can find some more details at the seewritehear
website
<https://www.seewritehear.com/accessible-mathml/mathspeak/examples/NemethBook/>.
Because MathSpeak does not speak math the way it is normally spoken in
the classroom in many cases (e.g., "x superscript 2 baseline plus 1" vs "x
squared plus 1"), GH (now seewritehear) has options to add semantic
interpretation along with verbosity options.
If the student is proficient in Nemeth Code (which he should be),
MathSpeak might be a reasonable option. I'm not an expert in Nemeth code,
but I'll go out on a limb and say that a general guideline for the teacher
is that he/she should explicitly name any greek letter and make sure the
beginning and ending of any 2D notation is obvious when speaking it. When
doing that, you won't be too far off from what MathSpeak says (exceptions
would be for nested radicals, fractions, powers, and superscripts, but those
are complicated to understand by just speech in any case). E.g, "fraction 1
over n end fraction"; "chi squared" is fine; "x bar" is ok after (probably a
few times) saying that "x bar" is written as "x with a line above it".
Neil Soiffer
On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 12:57 PM Bob Mathews via BlindMath <
blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> Hello Mary,
>
> MathSpeak is one of the 3 speech styles of MathPlayer, the free math
> speech plugin from Wiris. MathSpeak is described in the MathPlayer
User Manual:
> https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathplayer/start. If you don't have
> MathPlayer yet, there's a download link to MathPlayer 4 in the manual.
>
> It could be you were thinking of ClearSpeak. This was a joint project
> between the Educational Testing Service (ETS) and Design Science (now
> Wiris), under a US Department of Education Grant. You can find out
> more about ClearSpeak from its documentation:
>
> https://docs.wiris.com/en/mathtype/mathtype_desktop/accessibility/clea
> rspeak
> .
>
> Regards,
> Bob Mathews
> Wiris
>
> On Tue, Sep 8, 2020 at 2:34 PM Anderson, Mary Fran via BlindMath <
> blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> > Dear Blindmath,
> >
> > I am working with a blind student enrolled in statistics. I am
> > trying to help her teacher describe the statistics problems in a way
> > that my
> student
> > can understand. I have heard of something called math speak, but I
> haven?t
> > been able to find any information regarding this. Can anyone help
> > with
> this
> > issue?
> > Thank you.
> > Mary Fran Anderson
> > _______________________________________________
> > BlindMath mailing list
> > BlindMath at nfbnet.org
> > http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
> > To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info
> > for
> > BlindMath:
> > http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/bob%40wiris.c
> > om
> > BlindMath Gems can be found at <
> > http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
> >
>
> --
>
> MathType 7 is out! Check the new version at wiris.com/mathtype
> <http://www.wiris.com/mathtype?utm_source=emailfooter>
> _______________________________________________
> BlindMath mailing list
> BlindMath at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> BlindMath:
>
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/soiffer%40alum.
> mit.edu
> BlindMath Gems can be found at <
> http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
>
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------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Wed, 9 Sep 2020 05:04:56 +0000
From: Elizabeth Mohnke <lizmohnke at hotmail.com>
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Subject: Re: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Message-ID:
<SN6PR03MB44471F0F7E8C877FB0861095BA260 at SN6PR03MB4447.namprd03.prod.outlook.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hello Mary,
I found tactile graphics and a talking graphing calculator to be helpful
for my introductory statistics class. These were my two primary
accommodations for my statistics class in addition to a reader for in-class
handouts we worked on throughout the class to help us learn the material
from the lecture. I also Brailed out my notes using a slate and stylus. I am
not all that great with Braille, so I created a math system that worked for
me for the few simple formulas we needed to memorize. However, most of the
calculations were done using the various statistical functions on the
talking graphing calculator.
I hope this helps.
Warm regards,
Elizabeth
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindMath <blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Anderson,
Mary Fran via BlindMath
Sent: Tuesday, September 8, 2020 3:33 PM
To: blindmath at nfbnet.org
Cc: Anderson, Mary Fran <MaryFran.Anderson at wesd.org>
Subject: [BlindMath] Math Speak
Dear Blindmath,
I am working with a blind student enrolled in statistics. I am trying to
help her teacher describe the statistics problems in a way that my student
can understand. I have heard of something called math speak, but I haven?t
been able to find any information regarding this. Can anyone help with this
issue?
Thank you.
Mary Fran Anderson
_______________________________________________
BlindMath mailing list
BlindMath at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindmath_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
BlindMath:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindmath_nfbnet.org/lizmohnke%40hotmail.com
BlindMath Gems can be found at
<http://www.blindscience.org/blindmath-gems-home>
------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Tue, 8 Sep 2020 22:31:56 -0700
From: Newton Nguyen <newt.n94 at gmail.com>
To: BlindMath at nfbnet.org
Subject: [BlindMath] STEM Mentoring Program
Message-ID: <608B62E1-1249-4AA8-97D4-5DE14C72FDE1 at gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Dear Blind Math students and professionals,
Are you interested in a career in STEM or already in one? Would you like
to foster social and professional connections, join in on conversations
about how to make STEM more accessible, and cultivate or help others
cultivate the necessary skills to succeed in STEM fields? The NFB Science
and Engineering division invites you to participate in our new STEM
mentorship program. All who are at least a junior in high school and are
aspiring/already in a STEM career are welcome to sign up using this linked
Google Form
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd0p63m3xhR_hX-r3lwEylLtFuipX3_TVOIRRH4fsTcYnUhyA/viewform>
as a mentee, mentor, or both.
Participants will be asked to meet within their mentor parings at least
once a month, and all will be invited to join monthly socials, workshops,
round-table discussions, and many more fun activities. Sign ups will be open
until a week from now: Wednesday September 16, 2020.
If you have any questions or comments, please don?t hesitate to reach
out to Newton Nguyen <newton at caltech.edu <mailto:newton at caltech.edu>>. We
are looking forward to forming a vibrant community with you all.
Sincerely,
Gene Kim, Amelia Palmer, and Newton Nguyen
------------------------------
Subject: Digest Footer
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------------------------------
End of BlindMath Digest, Vol 170, Issue 1
*****************************************
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