[nagdu] Hey Got a Question for the List
Julie J
julielj at windstream.net
Sat May 1 18:33:55 UTC 2010
Tami wrote:
*The maximum reading speed with Braille or voice
-- as far as the figures I've ever heard -- are only a fraction of that of
an average print reader. So you're going to be spending a whole lot more
time on academic tests just to keep up with your peers! *
Not necessarily so. Granted my Braille reading speed is pitiful. I do know
people who read in the 300 to 500 words per minute range. It's not
impossible.
There is research showing that listening words per minute is much higher
than with print words per minute. That was sighted people, but I'd imagine
there wouldn't be any difference with blind people. I just checked my
JAWS, it says the rate is 96, which is 50 on the slider thingy. I don't
know what that translates to in wpm.
So I wouldn't say it's an all blind people can't read as fast, but it's more
of an individual thing. I walk fast with a cane and really fast with Monty,
but it's all relative.
Julie
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tamara Smith-Kinney" <tamara.8024 at comcast.net>
To: "'NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users'"
<nagdu at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 12:11 PM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] Hey Got a Question for the List
> Mark,
>
> Catherine's points are well made! I would add that the dog's ability to
> remember routes makes traveling a busy, complicated environment like a
> college campus much less fatiguing. The dog's ability to guide you around
> obstacles can end up saving an awful lot of time when you're going from
> here
> to there in a hurry.
>
> College campuses, by my experience, anyway, seem to be rich with moving
> targets and knots of people standing in the middle of the sidewalk, quad,
> whatever, talking while others play music... I love that atmosphere, but
> I
> think the dog's ability to navigate around all that and avoid the other
> scurrying students at the same time would make a huge difference for
> getting
> around campus without losing one's sanity. I know people who are
> perfectly
> sane who zip about campus with their canes, but I feel frazzled just
> thinking about it. /smile/
>
> Also, let us remember that the dog does not find every crack in the
> sidewalk
> and jam or poke you in the gut! I find this to be a big plus!
>
> I have also noticed that people who are standing there trying to figure
> out
> which way to go now and not making any noise or paying any attention to
> anything else get annoyed when your cane locates them for you. Or they
> figure it out and turn suddenly into your path, and there goes the cane --
> snap! Or they trip over it while you're putting on the brakes to keep
> from
> running into them -- laden with a heavy backpack. Then they can't figure
> out whether to yell at you to watch where you're going or to apologize you
> to death. In my opinion, their yelling and storming off is much less
> time-consuming than the interminably repetitious apologizing. I haven't
> had
> that many such encounters, but even a near miss can result in what seems
> like days of stressful politeness. The only person who actually sort of
> tripped over the cane was in as big a hurry as I was, so we both gasped
> out
> the sorry are you all right have a nice day bit in unison and moved on.
> This is my preferred scenario. /grin/
>
> I think I'm beginning to stretch a bit. I'm trying to remember college
> days
> when I was sans cane or dog but had a fair bit of tunnel vision and night
> blindness going on. Come to think of it, a cane wouldn't have hurt at all
> when I was dashing across campus in the noon sun and burst into a dimly
> lit
> building full of random groups of chatterers. /lol/ I never thought of
> it,
> though. D'oh! I never plowed into anybody, since I could navigate by
> sound
> and manage to zip through, then I could never figure out why I got to
> class
> feeling suddenly wrung out when I had been so peppy on the way there.
> D'oh!
>
> One factor to consider, too, is time management. In that, I include
> physical and brain energy management, as well. Even if your VR system is
> one of those that will provide you with the adaptive tools you need to
> succeed -- or if your parents can provide them, either way -- you'll be
> competing with visual readers. Like it or not, they have a big advantage
> when it comes to time spent on information acquisition, as well as in
> proofreading their papers. The maximum reading speed with braille or
> voice
> -- as far as the figures I've ever heard -- are only a fraction of that of
> an average print reader. So you're going to be spending a whole lot more
> time on academic tests just to keep up with your peers! Well, a college
> bound senior who is also blind probably does not find this to be news!
> /grin/ When I was considering school before I realized that our VR system
> is not one of the better -- or even functioning -- ones, I found that
> whole
> prospect fairly daunting. I'm used to whizzing through the academics
> without having to spend nearly enough time studying -- as far as everyone
> would tell me -- while still staying ahead of the game. So I started
> preparing myself mentally for the reality that I was going to have to work
> twice to three times as hard as my peers and hope like heck it was enough.
> That also applies to my profession (before VR), which is pretty reading
> intensive. Whenever I evaluated and updated my research on adaptive tools
> for the sort of information acquisition and management I did easily as a
> print reader, I was always focusing on building a tool kit that would
> enable
> me to use my time best in every task or part of a task so that I could
> stay
> competitive at something close to my then-current level. Yikes!
>
> Back to dog vs. cane. Those are adaptive tools, too, and which you use
> will
> affect both the extraordinary (compared to your peers) time/energy/stress
> management you will need to achieve. As near as I can tell, you're a
> really
> bright guy with great language and reasoning skills. So I'm thinking your
> peers at college will be the higher achievers with similar capabilities.
> So
> then it's all about leveling the playing field as much as you can -- or
> that's how I see it, anyway.
>
> The dog takes more time in terms of care, need for play, grooming, etc.
> However, as one who finds the dog-related tasks enjoyable and even
> soothing,
> I consider them a good break from whatever I'm working on or learning or
> trying to figure out how to do... So doing something with or for the dog
> is
> a great study break, if you will, because I can still think about what I'm
> studying or writing while relaxing and giving my mind a chance to wander
> and
> focus on something else a bit. Then I get back to work with a fresh
> perspective and energy, so that I can accomplish more in less time...
> Even
> traveling with the dog, I have more free head space to use for thinking,
> reviewing and planning than I do with the cane. With the cane I have to
> concentrate much, much harder to travel quickly enough to get where I'm
> going, so I can't think about anything else. And I arrive more fatigued,
> plain and simple. With Mitzi, we get there much, much more quickly,
> especially if I give her the go ahead to hit the turbo and just hustle to
> keep up. /smile/ I may be huffing and puffing a bit when we get to our
> destination, but I feel invigorated and energized and more mentally alert
> and able to focus as I like to on whatever I came there to do.
>
> So the trade off in time spent maintaining the mobility tool isn't as
> direct
> as it appears on the surface. For me, at least. Everyone is different
> that
> way. But it is one thing I considered when choosing to get a dog for the
> career that was supposed to happen with tools from VR... Without those
> tools, I find I'm at a 4 to 1 time disadvantage in most tasks over my best
> estimate (based on others who do the same sorts of things) simply as a
> blind
> person doing what I used to do sighted.... So when I have to pick up and
> go
> somewhere to use the results of whatever project I have cussed my way
> through for a day or two in order to accomplish 2 hours worth of work, I
> am
> really, really glad that I can harness up my zippy black dog and let her
> be
> my fast Ferrari! Great stress reliever for me to walk fast and just get
> places with all that fresh oxygen to the brain and stuff. I could get
> there
> with the cane, of course, but that would increase my travel time and even
> when I hustle with the cane, I don't get the same boost.
>
> As far as the social aspects involved in the choice... How they balance
> out
> for you depends on you and what you want in your activities and
> friendships.
> I'm a snarly old wench, so I just don't have time for people who can't or
> won't deal with the dog. I do have friends whose homes I will visit
> without
> the poodle, just as they will visit my home which includes the hound as
> well
> as the poodle. A lot of my favorite fun activities are also very
> dog-friendly, and a lot of my friends take their dogs along without
> questioning it. So Mitzi can just hop in their already doggy car and
> nobody
> even has to discuss whether or not she should be there. Everybody assumes
> that if you're going, the dog goes, too. /smile/ I find they're also
> very
> willing -- without being asked -- to offer advice and suggestions (good
> ones) and to ask questions about how to best include Mitzi in work mode
> when
> we all leap out of the car to go somewhere to do something that does not
> normally involve dogs unless they're working. /smile/ I've ridden a
> couple
> of times recently with someone who is fine with the dog but not crazy
> about
> the critters and who does not have doggy hair, smell, crumbs, toys, etc.,
> already implanted in her vehicle. So I'm extra strict to make sure the
> Mitziness stays 4 on the floor and keeps the nose in bounds and that I've
> made extra sure she's completely clean (added goings over with washcloth)
> out of respect for the car. I also don't take her into this friend's
> house
> because of the cat. Although the first time I went over there to knock on
> the door to ask a quick question without going in, I ended up standing
> outside the big living room sliding door where the cat was puffed up and
> making very sure the poodle thing knew she was not welcome on the property
> or anywhere in sight! Mitzi was thrilled of course, because the cat was
> paying attention to her, so it must like her. /lol/
>
> When we talk about going to symphonies and plays and concerts and that
> sorta
> stuff, Mitzi is always part of the discussion. We're planning for when
> our
> tight budget loosens up a bit so haven't made final decisions on whether
> to
> take the dog, but I love it that DD just naturally considers her as coming
> along with me.
>
> But that's not college life, so I will leave it the students with dogs to
> discuss the social aspects of having a dog at school.
>
> Tami Smith-Kinney
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
> Of Cathryn Bonnette
> Sent: Friday, April 30, 2010 10:48 PM
> To: nagdu at nfbnet.org
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Hey Got a Question for the List
>
> Greetings,
>
>
>
> In response to a unique advantage of using a guide dog over a cane, I find
> that canes don't know the things that guide dogs do. For example, you
> cannot
> tell a cane to "Find right, inside." And expect the cane to guide you to a
> doorway 20 yards ahead on the right. There are countless other examples.
> Canes don't ever remember routes you have taken before, no matter how
> frequently you have used the route. Also, a cane cannot find you a seat in
> a
> crowded lecture hall 5 minutes after class has started. Consider the
> prospect of poking around with a cane; even if you don't snag anyone's
> nylons in the process, it is definitely not the greatest first impression.
> Also, you still may not find an empty seat if the few left are in the
> middle
> of rows and book bags etc on the floor will make it difficult to locate
> them
> using the end of a stick, with or without a ball on the end.
>
> Granted, a guide dog requires food, water, relief time, exercise, and care
> a
> cane will never ask. You can be refused public transportation if fleas are
> evident and constant treatment is required. Grooming, bathing, and
> keeping
> your room or apartment free of dog hair are all more time consuming than
> just leaning a stick by the door. It depends on who you are as a blind
> person who wants and needs to function independently. A guide dog requires
> training and consistency with limits, but that well trained dog will get
> you
> to places and find things for you that a cane cannot. If the task is
> convincing parents, think about what you need in order to travel
> independently and use your needs as arguments to support your request. If
> you can see well enough now, and you locate addresses, or elevators, or
> stairs etc. independently in strange places using a cane, then your
> parents
> may have a point that a stick is more convenient, and you don't need a
> dog.
> If not, why should you be limited in where you go because a stick is not
> helpful enough for you?
>
> Hoping these ideas will be helpful, and give you ideas to consider.
> Contact
> me off list if you wish, cathrynisfinally at verizon.net.
>
>
>
> Best wishes-
>
>
>
> Cathryn (& Abby)
>
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