[Cinci-nfb] FW: [Ohio-talk] BELL article

Walter Mitchell walterl.mitch2 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 5 22:51:16 UTC 2017


Cincinnati,

It is very obvious in the below article that we can be proud of the BELL
program and all those that worked to make it successful.

I had problems opening the link, but there is text at the bottom of the
previous message.

Great job everyone!

Walter

-----Original Message-----
From: Ohio-Talk [mailto:ohio-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Shelbi
Hindel via Ohio-Talk
Sent: Wednesday, July 05, 2017 8:35 AM
To: ohio talk
Cc: Shelbi Hindel
Subject: [Ohio-talk] BELL article

Academy gets kids in touch with Braille early

http://www.thisweeknews.com/storyimage/OH/20170703/NEWS/306309948/AR/0/AR-30
6309948.jpg&MaxH=225&MaxW=225

Monday 

Jul 3, 2017 at 9:00 AM 

KEVIN PARKS THISWEEKNEWS.COM @KevinParksTW1 

When Heather Leiterman was a student at the Ohio State School for the Blind,
her mother pushed for her to be taught Braille, the system of raised dots
that can be read with the fingertips.

"It is just as useful as a pen and paper to a sighted person," she said.

However, school officials felt that little Heather, who had low vision due
to glaucoma, still had sufficient sight to read magnified text, so she never
learned Braille as a child.

By the time Leiterman, a former longtime resident of Clintonville who now
lives in downtown Columbus, lost her vision completely at age 29, it was a
little late in life to pick up the subtle skill needed to master Braille.
Leiterman, now in her 40s, said her fingertips lack the sensitivity the
language requires.

"Technically, I guess I'm functionally illiterate," Leiterman said.

To help prevent others from falling into the same category, Leiterman served
last week as coordinator of the fifth annual Ohio Braille Enrichment for
Literacy and Learning Academy, held at her alma mater in Clintonville for
blind and low-vision students ages 5-12 from throughout the state. It is a
program of the National Federation of the Blind.

The Ohio BELL Academy targets blind and low-vision children who may not
receive enough Braille and nonvisual skill instruction in school or who
could benefit from summertime Braille enrichment, according to the
federation's website.

The academy features crafts, games and other projects that emphasize the use
of Braille and teach independent-living skills, as well as mentoring from
blind adults and field trips.

As important as the intense Braille instruction and the introduction to
technology are for the youngsters in the Ohio BELL program, Leiterman said,
is the interaction they have with one another.

"Some of these kids are in public schools, and they never meet another blind
kid," she said.

"The success is getting them here to participate in the program," added
Michael Leiterman, Heather's husband, who helped to coordinate the academy.
"The kids get, I hope, inspiration to hear that Heather and I have handled
the world."

Michael Leiterman, an attorney, also is blind.

"What we want the students to get from it is we as blind adults live full
lives," said Marianne Denning, a volunteer for the past four summers. "We
try to do it in a fun way. We mix some fun with it."

"This population is so underserved in school," said Debbie Baker, a
volunteer teacher from the Ohio BELL Academy's inception. "It's nice to see
them interact with each other and give them social time because they're all
on a level playing field."

Some of the half-dozen or so students, including one who traveled from
Virginia, arrived already fairly proficient in Braille, while others hadn't
been exposed to it much, Denning said.

"This opportunity is especially important for those students," she added.

"It was fun and exciting," said 9-year-old Kendon Sears, a Fayetteville
resident. "We got to get ice cream. We got to see a fire truck, but it
started raining.

"Sad face," he said, adding a verbal emoji.

kparks at thisweeknews.com

 

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