[nabs-l] Large print graph paper?
Elizabeth Mohnke
lizmohnke at hotmail.com
Fri May 20 23:07:40 UTC 2016
Hello Taylor,
Have you checked the NFB Independence Market or the American Printing House
for the Blind? It seems to me like I have seen large print graph paper from
somewhere before, but I cannot remember where. However, if you cannot find
it, perhaps you could create your own with a computer and a printer.
I used a reader the last time I took a math class. When it came to creating
graphs, I simply instructed the reader to place dots on various points of
the graph paper, and connect the dots in the appropriate manner. I found
this method to work for when I needed to graph something out visually for a
test.
However, I feel like graphs are only a visual representation of math that
can be understood without creating this visual representation. Since I
learned math visually in high school, I find that I can still picture things
in my head as to what things look like visually when it comes to math.
Anyway, I hope this information helps you.
Warm regards,
Elizabeth
I
-----Original Message-----
From: nabs-l [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Taylor Arndt
via nabs-l
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2016 5:48 PM
To: nabs-l at nfbnet.org
Cc: Taylor Arndt <taylorarndt99 at gmail.com>
Subject: [nabs-l] Large print graph paper?
Hi,
So I am taking a math class that requires graphing. I have a little bit of
vision, but was wondering if there such thing as a low vision graph paper.
Is there such thing as low vision graph paper that contains four quadrants
for the quadrant on a sighted person graph paper?
Sent from my iPhone
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