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<a href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/2011/09/multi-level-teaching-approach.html">The Multi-Level Teaching Approach</a>
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When a child has lost sight or is losing sight, no matter what age, they
need multiple areas of instruction. If they are older, they need this
more than ever.<br>
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If you can get a child when they are young, you can put them on a brailler, or <a href="http://www.mountbattenbrailler.com/">Mountbatten</a>
for small fingers, a computer with talking software and some type of
player for audio books: teach them the Nemeth and other blind skills
needed and they can grow with the class.<br>
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If however, you have an older child come to you, especially if they are
in middle or high school, they need a way to get that heavy bulk of work
done within the day. If they are going to learn all those blind skills,
you will need to show them the relevance of what you are teaching them.
If you choose to teach them from an outside curriculum such as one of
the braille curricula, which are great, BUT, they will fight you on
this, whether passive aggressive or a direct "No". You will be adding to
their burden of trying to do their regular classes already...they will
think, "HOW am I going to do one more?" <br>
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The multi-level approach: Out of the students' day, they will have some
type of English class. This is the ideal class to adapt into braille and
use technology. You go to<a href="http://www.bookshare.org/"> Bookshare.org</a>
and download the book, or rather you show them how to do it. You show
them the thousands of their favorite stories are right there to read.
You get him excited. You also download Victor Reader soft and install on
the computer or you have a handheld reader. You go to JAWS and download<a href="http://www.freedomscientific.com/downloads/RealSpeak-Solo-Direct-Voices/RealSpeak-Solo-Direct-Downloads.asp"> Real speak voices</a>
of their choice so when they listen to books they are listening to a
voice they enjoy. You get them signed up with the state book and braille
library, you get them signed up with everything blind--for a list, go
to <a href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/">http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/</a> then click on <b>Files to Download and use</b> and you will see a link for<b> website resources</b>
available to you. He will need a minimum of an hour a day with you and
you can pull him periodically from English because you will be working
on the same lesson. If he is older and about ready to graduate, he will
most likely need more time.<br>
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Now the student has the book on the computer. You also have him emboss
the chapter he is presently reading right now in class. He will braille
the pages, read the pages and listen to them on his computer, so he
always has a way to keep up in his class. When reading braille, you will
paragraph jump with him, as in you read and he follows then he reads.
Go to <b>Braille--Get them Hooked</b> in a <a href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/">http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/</a>.
You show him how to type out all his answers to everything in WORD and
then he emails the lessons off to his teacher. He will learn the
technology incredibly fast. Even if he has never touched a computer
before, which will happen if the child comes from another country, he
will learn the keyboarding in about 4-5 hours, an hour a day over 4-5
days...don't try and do this in one sitting. The brain does not work
that way. He will know enough JAWS commands to be fairly independent in 2
weeks. It happens fast. If he has something like a Braille Note, his
braille skills will accelerate also because he is getting the audio,
tactile feedback when he presses the keys. For orientation and mobility,
you blindfold him so his listening skills are enhanced and honed and
you quiz him on how to get from point A to point B in the
building...then an O&M instructor takes him outside and they begin
learning about city blocks.<br>
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As long as you the teacher know the braille strategies, the JAWS and
computer commands, you will see him sail.Teach him the help menu so even
if you don't know something he will learn it himself.<div> </div><div><span style="FONT-FAMILY:'Brush Script MT';COLOR:black;FONT-SIZE:18pt;"><font color="#4040ff"> Denise </font></span></div><div><span style="FONT-FAMILY:'Brush Script MT';COLOR:black;FONT-SIZE:18pt;"></span> </div><div>Denise M. Robinson, TVI, Ph.D. <br>Teacher of the Blind & Visually Impaired<br>TechVision-Independent Contractor</div><div>Specialist in blind programming/teaching/training</div><div>509-674-1853 <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="mailto:deniserob@gmail.com"> deniserob@gmail.com</a></div><div> </div><div><a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/">http://blindgeteducated.blogspot.com/</a></div><div> </div></div></body></html>