[nfbwatlk] Fw: The Case for Braille
Alco Canfield
amcanfield at comcast.net
Tue Apr 7 20:59:55 UTC 2009
Very well written!
Alco
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Freeman <k7uij at panix.com>
Sent: Monday, April 06, 2009 8:54 PM
To: NFB of Washington Talk <nfbwatlk at nfbnet.org>
Subject: [nfbwatlk] Fw: The Case for Braille
----- Original Message -----
From: "Doris" <dorisbel at telus.net>
To: "list" <list at cfb.ca>
Sent: Monday, April 06, 2009 9:05 AM
Subject: The Case for Braille
The Case for Braille
by William M. Raeder
Trustee and former President, National Braille Press
>From the mid-'60s to the present, the percentage of school-aged blind
children in this country who use braille as their primary reading medium
has dropped from 50 percent to 12 percent, and more than a generation of
blind children has been largely allowed to grow up illiterate under the
damaging notion that tape recordings and talking computers are
sufficient for them.
This decline in the teaching and learning of braille has occurred not
because the value of literacy has in any way diminished. On the
contrary, in our democratic society for which a literate public is the
cornerstone and in an economy which is increasingly complex and
information-driven, the ability to read and write is increasingly
crucial. This is all the more true as society's vision of the capacity
of blind people to achieve despite their handicap grows, as prejudices
against them diminish, as the law supports them in equal employment
opportunity, and as opportunities for blind people to produce and
contribute are expanding.
Braille is the only means by which blind people can truly read the
written language. It is certainly true that for easy reading materials
such as novels, audio intake using the recorded human voice, or the
electronically synthesized mimicking of the human voice, is not only
satisfactory but sometimes preferred by blind people, just as it is by
sighted people. By the same token, just as sighted people have by no
means given up the written language in favor of audio only, so blind
people should not be expected to give up their written language. Here
are just a few examples of situations in which being able to truly read
is critical:
a.. Studying, not simply reading serially, complex material such as a
chemistry book, cookbook, or financial statement
b.. Keeping two channels open to the mind at the same time, as in
delivering a speech when referring to notes
c.. Taking notes and keeping records for easy reference, such as
address books and "to do" lists, and labeling items such as food
containers, file folders, and CDs
d.. Reading aloud, e.g. to children, in religious services, in class
e.. Learning the intricacies of language: spelling, grammar, and
punctuation
f.. Communicating with and among people who are deaf and blind, who
have no other means of human communication other than hand to hand
"talking"
Academic research has shown that the early learning of braille
correlates strongly with both academic and employment success later in
life. Reading is not only a major -- if not the major -- source of
practical information for effective thinking and productivity; but also
a major source for knowledge, inspiration, creativity, and the
development of values.
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