[Nfbc-info] FW: [Brl-coordinators] Campaign tries to teach the benefits of Braille

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Wed Jan 7 18:57:25 UTC 2009


Subject: [Brl-coordinators] Campaign tries to teach the benefits of Braille

Campaign tries to teach the benefits of Braille

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Learning the system is linked to employment

January 5, 2009 - 2:38 PM
SUE McMILLIN <mailto:sue.mcmillin at gazette.com

Since its invention in the 1820s, Braille has been the key to literacy - and
employment - for blind people, according to the National Federation of the
Blind.

It's appalling that only 10 percent of blind children in the United States
are learning Braille, said Kevan Worley, president of the federation's
Colorado Springs chapter.

Nationally, about 70 percent of blind people are unemployed, Worley said.
But, he said, more than 80 percent of blind people who have learned Braille
are employed.

The federation has launched a Braille literacy campaign as it celebrates the
200th anniversary of the birth of Louis Braille, the blind Frenchman who
invented the Braille alphabet and published it in 1829.  
Sunday,
Worley and other members of the local chapter demonstrated various
mechanical and electronic Braille writers at the Barnes & Noble Booksellers
on Briargate Boulevard.  Similar events took place at about 60 bookstores
across the country.

The small Braille machines easily attracted the attention of children
visiting the store.

"Kids love to learn about Braille because it's a code," Worley said.
Many myths about Braille - that's it's slow and hard to learn or that it can
be replaced by audio material - have kept the Braille literacy rate low, he
said.  Also, there's a shortage of qualified teachers.  
But
perhaps the biggest obstacle is that most blind children have some visual
capabilities and are encouraged to use that rather than learn Braille,
Worley and others said.

Rene Harrell, who is teaching Braille to her 7-year-old daughter Clare,
said: "The default is to use print because people believe it's easier and
it's less intimidating."

That might be OK for children's books when there's only a few large-print
words on a page, she said, but by the time blind students get to high school
they can't keep up with the reading and can't compete for college and jobs.

Harrell said she adopted Clare when she was 4 and at first believed that she
could only perceive light.  It turned out that Clare has some visual
abilities, but they can vary based on the environment and other factors.

"We decided to let Clare use her vision when it's useful and let her learn
techniques for when it's not," Harrell said.

Most children learn Braille at about the same rate that seeing children
learn to read, Worley said.  And it opens a world to them that listening to
audio books alone cannot.  When he adopted his son, Nijat, from Azerbaijan
at age 11, he'd had no Braille training.  He was living in a refugee camp
and when his sight was lost at age 9, his schooling had stopped.

Nijat said he quickly picked up Braille (and English), learning to read it
with Harry Potter books.  He graduated last year from Cheyenne Mountain High
School and is now a freshman at the University of Colorado in Boulder.  Now
he teaches his dad how to download the newspaper on the equivalent of a
Braille laptop, as well as scanning and downloading his textbooks so that he
can read them in Braille.

Contrary to popular belief, adults who lose their sight later in life can
learn Braille, too, Worley said.

Rob Lewark, 45, awoke one day in May 2005 and could barely see.  
His
vision was about 80 percent gone, and by January 2006, he was blind because
of glaucoma.  He'd done a variety of things but in midlife had gone back to
school and became an architect.  That career was gone, too.

But he learned Braille at the Colorado Center for the Blind in Littleton,
and soon was running his own cafe on Peterson Air Force Base.

"There are a lot of things blind people can do," he said.  As for the saying
"Life's a bitch," Lewark had his comeback tattooed in Braille on his arm:
"Let's get this bitch started."

Contact the Writer: 636-0251 or sue.mcmillin at gazette.com
<mailto:sue.mcmillin at gazette.com


Publicity Value 	$1,024.59 USD

Circulation :	 96,515




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