[blparent] Just Curious

Jess jessica.trask.reagan at gmail.com
Sat Sep 12 10:30:43 UTC 2009


Jo,
I believe a blind student is still taught the abacus in third grade I 
believe. And, then my educated guess would be that the introduction of the 
talking calculator would most likely happen a few years later when they 
start getting into the more advanced math classes such as Algebra, Calculus, 
Geometry, Trigemetry and Statistics.  I'm not a parent yet but I'm visually 
impaired.
Jessica
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jo Elizabeth Pinto" <jopinto at pcdesk.net>
To: "NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 11:55 PM
Subject: [blparent] Just Curious


> Hi.  I'm proofreading a third grade math book right now, and it's got me 
> curious about something.  When I was in school, I learned math on the 
> abacus.  It wasn't really all that different from the way other kids were 
> learning, except I used the abacus instead of pencil and paper.  But in 
> the math books I see now, they're using a lot of different ways to teach. 
> So, for those of you who are younger than I am--I graduated from high 
> school in 1989--is the abacus still taught to blind children?  Are other 
> ways of doing math taught as well?  When are talking calculators 
> introduced?  (Talking calculators came out when I was in the fifth or 
> sixth grade, I think, and they were about twice the size of the ones now, 
> with half the speech quality.)  Anyway, I was just wondering.
>
> Jo Elizabeth
>
> Until lions have their historians, tales of the hunt shall always glorify 
> the hunters.--African Proverb
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