[nobe-l] Fwd: [BANA-Announce] BANA Adopts Unified English Braille (UEB) for United States
David Andrews
dandrews at visi.com
Tue Nov 6 01:15:07 UTC 2012
>
>Press Release
>
>November 2012
>
>
>
>For Immediate Release
>
>CONTACT: Frances Mary D'Andrea, Chair
>
>Braille Authority of North America
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>Phone: 412-521-5797
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>Email: <mailto:literacy2 at mindspring.com>literacy2 at mindspring.com
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>
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>BANA Adopts Unified English Braille (UEB) for United States
>
>
>
>On November 2, 2012, the Braille Authority of North America (BANA)
>set a new course for the future of braille in the United States
>(U.S.) when it adopted Unified English Braille (UEB). The motion,
>which passed decisively, specifies that UEB will eventually replace
>the current English Braille American Edition and that the U.S. will
>retain the Nemeth Code for Mathematics and Science Notation.
>
>
>
>The transition to UEB will not be immediate and will follow a
>carefully crafted timeline. Implementation plans will be formulated
>with the input and participation of stakeholders from the consumer,
>education, rehabilitation, transcription, and production
>communities. Plans will take into consideration the various aspects
>of creating, teaching, learning, and using braille in a wide variety
>of settings. The plans will be designed to provide workable
>transitions for all involved in braille use and production and to
>minimize disruption for current braille readers.
>
>
>
>UEB is based on the current literary braille code and was developed
>with input from many people, primarily braille readers, who worked
>to achieve an optimal balance among many key factors. Those factors
>include keeping the general-purpose literary code as its base,
>allowing the addition of new symbols, providing flexibility for
>change as print changes, reducing the complexity of rules, and
>allowing greater accuracy in back translation.
>
>
>
>Letters and numbers will stay the same as they are in the current
>literary code. There will be some changes to punctuation, but most
>will remain the same. Some rules for the use of contractions will
>change. Nine contractions will be eliminated, and some contractions
>will be used more often. A FAQ providing more detail about changes
>is available on the BANA website.
>
>
>
>After implementation, the official braille codes for the United
>States will be Unified English Braille; Nemeth Code for Mathematics
>and Science Notation, 1972 Revision and published updates; Music
>Braille Code, 1997; and The IPA Braille Code, 2008.
>
>
>
>More detailed information about UEB and the motion that BANA passed
>can be found on the BANA website at
><http://www.brailleauthority.org/>www.brailleauthority.org.
>
>
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>The Board of BANA consists of appointed representatives from fifteen
>member organizations of braille producers, transcribers, teachers,
>and consumers.
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>
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>The mission and purpose of the Braille Authority of North America
>are to assure literacy for tactile readers through the
>standardization of braille and/or tactile graphics. BANA promotes
>and facilitates the use, teaching, and production of braille. It
>publishes rules, interprets, and renders opinions pertaining to
>braille in all existing codes. It deals with codes now in existence
>or to be developed in the future, in collaboration with other
>countries using English braille. In exercising its function and
>authority, BANA considers the effects of its decisions on other
>existing braille codes and formats; the ease of production by
>various methods; and acceptability to readers.
>
>
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