[Pibe-division] Fwd: [AERNet] FW: Special Physics software for blind student

Krystal Guillory krystalguillory at aol.com
Wed Nov 23 14:21:37 UTC 2011


Love it! 

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 23, 2011, at 6:52 AM, EricGuillory at aol.com wrote:

> Often times, it seems there is a paucity of creative and proactive thought when it comes to finding access solutions. I applaud these efforts and hope that work in this regard will continue. I like the fact that the young lady had a ready reply for why she felt compelled to take STEM  courses. All too frequently, our students are discouraged from doing so, even if their strength is STEM subject material, as it is felt work in these areas is too difficult or inaccessible.
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> EG
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: Disabled Student Services in Higher Education [mailto:DSSHE-L at LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU] On Behalf Of Schnitzer, Anna
> Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2011 7:26 AM
> To: DSSHE-L at LISTSERV.BUFFALO.EDU
> Subject: Special Physics software for blind  student
> 
> How a Professor Gave a Blind Student a New Outlook on Science November 21, 2011, 4:51 pm
> 
> By Alexandra Rice <http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/author/arice>
> 
> Amanda Lacy was frustrated with her physics class and ready to drop it.
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> Ms. Lacy, a blind student at Austin Community College, is a computer-science major who loves her classes but often struggles in them, not because she doesn’t understand the material, but because she doesn’t have access to adequate textbooks. And when she started taking the introduction-to-physics class, things got even worse, until a professor stepped in with a solution.
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> The college provides blind students with digital copies of textbooks so they can listen to them on the computer or read them using an electronic Braille display. But the figures and graphs in Ms. Lacy’s physics book don’t easily translate the same way that text does.
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> “There are many symbols that the computer doesn’t recognize,” Ms. Lacy said, “so it just comes out as gibberish.” For example, Ms. Lacy said in an interview, the computer will read ‘X squared’ simply as ‘X2′.
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> When Ms. Lacy showed her digital textbook to her computer-science professor, Richard  Baldwin, he was shocked, she said. He told her if someone didn’t take her problem seriously there was no way she would make it through the course.
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> So Mr. Baldwin started working with Ms. Lacy for a few hours each week, slowly going through the textbook and trying to explain the graphics to her in a way that she understood. “He’d do whatever he could to get these concepts across,” Ms. Lacy said. “He’d scratch them out on paper, draw them on my hand, things like that.” While they were working together, Mr. Baldwin began creating an open-access online tutorial <http://cnx.org/content/col11294/latest/>  for blind students learning physics.
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> In Mr. Baldwin’s tutorials, equations are written using only symbols found on keyboards so that everything is one-dimensional and presented in a format that blind people can read. Using the tutorials, Ms. Lacy excelled in her physics class and received an A in the course.
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> Working with Ms. Lacy taught Mr. Baldwin many things, too, such as that blind people  can’t draw with much accuracy.?So he came up with a new software for that as well. “I sent this thing to her at home, and the next time I saw her she was pretty elated,” Mr. Baldwin said. “She told me, ‘Finally, I can doodle.’” Before that, her physics professor would just allow her to skip the problems that required sketches for answers. Now, Ms. Lacy says, she is working with the software so that when she takes Physics II she can turn in her completed homework with the rest of the students.
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> Sometimes people ask her why she doesn’t just study something easier for blind students, like English or history, Ms. Lacy says. What does she tell them? “Because I’ll get bored.”
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> This entry was posted in Computer Science  <http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/category/computer-science> , Software <http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/category/software> , Uncategorized <http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/category/uncategorized> . Bookmark the permalink <http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/how-a-professor-gave-a-blind-student-a-new-outlook-on-science/34424> .
> 
> http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/how-a-professor-gave-a-blind-student-a-new-outlook-on-science/34424?sid=wc&utm_source=wc&utm_medium=en
> 
> Anna Ercoli Schnitzer
> Liaison/Disability Issues Librarian?Taubman Health Sciences Library Coordinator, UM Council for Disability Concerns University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109 schnitzr at umich.edu
> 
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