[stylist] Michigan protesters highlight need for Braille education
Donna Hill
penatwork at epix.net
Thu Jun 25 15:46:37 UTC 2009
Hi Friends,
Does anyone know if any of these folks are in the NFB? It sure seems
like they might be, but the article doesn't say.
Donna
***
From Lansing State Journal
Advocates of Braille push for support
Group says education decreased drastically over last few decades
BRITTANY SMITH • BRITTANYSMITH at LSJ.COM • JUNE 24, 2009 • FROM LANSING
STATE JOURNAL
As technology has improved over time, people who are blind or visually
impaired have benefited from
computers
and other devices that can read to them and help with their navigation.
But this same technology also hurts the blind community, according to a
group of Braille literacy advocates who attended Tuesday the first
Lansing Braille-A-Thon
at the Capitol. The event was hosted by the Quality
Education
Team for Students Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired.
The group of attendees came in support of Braille education, which they
say has decreased drastically over the last few decades.
"We have to better evaluate how we educate our blind youth," said Geri
Taeckens, coordinator of Braille-A-Thon and a commissioner for the
Michigan Commission
for the Blind. Advocates argue Braille education is the key to success
for those in the blind community.
According to Taeckens, only 10 percent of the children are learning
Braille. Only 30 percent of adults who are blind are employed and out of
that number,
90 percent are competitive Braille readers, the highest skill level
achievable. In Michigan, approximately 50,000 people are blind or
visually impaired,
according to the Michigan Commission for the Blind.
"All this technology is great, but it's only a supplement. Kids need to
know Braille," said Taeckens, who learned Braille at age 3.
Tim Paulding, 29, of Kalamazoo, didn't learn Braille until after he
graduated from the college. He said learning Braille later in life
proved to be difficult.
"If I had learned to read Braille as a child, reading now wouldn't be so
difficult, college wouldn't have been as difficult," said the University
of Michigan
graduate. He now works at the Michigan Commission for the Blind Training
Center as an events coordinator, helping children learn Braille and
social skills.
For Greg Botting, 15, of Ionia, and a student representative for the
group, Braille education is critical.
"We're losing Braille in the blind community," Botting said. "It's our
way of survival."
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