[Vabs] Fwd: Listening to Braille from the NY Times

Corbb O'Connor corbbo at gmail.com
Mon Jan 4 01:06:47 UTC 2010



Begin forwarded message:

From: "Joe Orozco" <jsorozco at gmail.com>
Date: January 3, 2010 5:14:27 PM EST
To: "'National Association of Blind Students mailing list'" <nabs-l at nfbnet.org 
 >
Subject: [nabs-l] Listening to Braille from the NY Times
Reply-To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list <nabs-l at nfbnet.org 
 >

Listening to Braille
By RACHEL AVIV
Published: December 30, 2009

AT 4 O'CLOCK each morning, Laura J. Sloate begins her daily reading. She
calls a phone service that reads newspapers aloud in a synthetic  
voice, and
she listens to The Wall Street Journal at 300 words a minute, which is
nearly twice the average pace of speech. Later, an assistant reads The
Financial Times to her while she uses her computer's text-to-speech  
system
to play The Economist aloud. She devotes one ear to the paper and the  
other
to the magazine. The managing director of a Wall Street investment
management firm, Sloate has been blind since age 6, and although she  
reads
constantly, poring over the news and the economic reports for several  
hours
every morning, she does not use Braille. "Knowledge goes from my ears  
to my
brain, not from my finger to my brain," she says. As a child she  
learned how
the letters of the alphabet sounded, not how they appeared or felt on  
the
page. She doesn't think of a comma in terms of its written form but  
rather
as "a stop on the way before continuing." This, she says, is the  
future of
reading for the blind. "Literacy evolves," she told me. "When Braille  
was
invented, in the 19th century, we had nothing else. We didn't even have
radio. At that time, blindness
<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/symptoms/blindness/overview.html?in
line=nyt-classifier>  was a disability. Now it's just a minor, minor
impairment."

A few decades ago, commentators predicted that the electronic age would
create a postliterate generation as new forms of media eclipsed the  
written
word. Marshall McLuhan claimed that Western culture would return to the
"tribal and oral pattern." But the decline of written language has  
become a
reality for only the blind. Although Sloate does regret not spending  
more
time learning to spell in her youth - she writes by dictation - she  
says she
thinks that using Braille would have only isolated her from her sighted
peers. "It's an arcane means of communication, which for the most part
should be abolished," she told me. "It's just not needed today."

Braille books are expensive and cumbersome, requiring reams of thick,
oversize paper. The National Braille Press, an 83-year-old publishing  
house
in Boston, printed the Harry Potter
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/complete_coverage/harry
_potter/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  series on its Heidelberg
cylinder; the final product was 56 volumes, each nearly a foot tall.  
Because
a single textbook can cost more than $1,000 and there's a shortage of
Braille teachers in public schools, visually impaired students often  
read
using MP3 players, audiobooks and computer-screen-reading software.

A report released last year by the National Federation of the Blind, an
advocacy group with 50,000 members, said that less than 10 percent of  
the
1.3 million legally blind Americans read Braille. Whereas roughly half  
of
all blind children learned Braille in the 1950s, today that number is  
as low
as 1 in 10, according to the report. The figures are controversial  
because
there is debate about when a child with residual vision has "too much  
sight"
for Braille and because the causes of blindness have changed over the
decades - in recent years more blind children have multiple  
disabilities,
because of premature births. It is clear, though, that Braille  
literacy has
been waning for some time, even among the most intellectually capable,  
and
the report has inspired a fervent movement to change the way blind  
people
read. "What we're finding are students who are very smart, very verbally
able - and illiterate," Jim Marks, a board member for the past five  
years of
the Association on Higher Education and Disability, told me. "We stopped
teaching our nation's blind children how to read and write. We put a  
tape
player, then a computer, on their desks. Now their writing is phonetic  
and
butchered. They never got to learn the beauty and shape and structure of
language."

For much of the past century, blind children attended residential
institutions where they learned to read by touching the words. Today,
visually impaired children can be well versed in literature without  
knowing
how to read; computer-screen-reading software will even break down  
each word
and read the individual letters aloud. Literacy has become much harder  
to
define, even for educators.

"If all you have in the world is what you hear people say, then your  
mind is
limited," Darrell Shandrow, who runs a blog called Blind Access Journal,
told me. "You need written symbols to organize your mind. If you can't  
feel
or see the word, what does it mean? The substance is gone." Like many
Braille readers, Shandrow says that new computers, which form a single  
line
of Braille cells at a time, will revive the code of bumps, but these  
devices
are still extremely costly and not yet widely used. Shandrow views the
decline in Braille literacy as a sign of regression, not progress:  
"This is
like going back to the 1400s, before Gutenberg's printing press came  
on the
scene," he said. "Only the scholars and monks knew how to read and  
write.
And then there were the illiterate masses, the peasants."

UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY, blind people were confined to an oral culture.  
Some
tried to read letters carved in wood or wax, formed by wire or  
outlined in
felt with pins. Dissatisfied with such makeshift methods, Louis  
Braille, a
student at the Royal Institute for Blind Youth in Paris, began  
studying a
cipher language of bumps, called night writing, developed by a French  
Army
officer so soldiers could send messages in the dark. Braille modified  
the
code so that it could be read more efficiently - each letter or  
punctuation
symbol is represented by a pattern of one to six dots on a matrix of  
three
rows and two columns - and added abbreviations for commonly used words  
like
"knowledge," "people" and "Lord." Endowed with a reliable method of  
written
communication for the first time in history, blind people had a  
significant
rise in social status, and Louis Braille was embraced as a kind of  
liberator
and spiritual savior. With his "godlike courage," Helen Keller wrote,
Braille built a "firm stairway for millions of sense-crippled human  
beings
to climb from hopeless darkness to the Mind Eternal."

At the time, blindness was viewed not just as the absence of sight but  
also
as a condition that created a separate kind of species, more innocent  
and
malleable, not fully formed. Some scholars said that blind people  
spoke a
different sort of language, disconnected from visual experience. In  
his 1933
book, "The Blind in School and Society," the psychologist Thomas  
Cutsforth,
who lost his sight at age 11, warned that students who were too rapidly
assimilated into the sighted world would become lost in "verbal  
unreality."
At some residential schools, teachers avoided words that referenced  
color or
light because, they said, students might stretch the meanings beyond  
sense.
These theories have since been discredited, and studies have shown that
blind children as young as 4 understand the difference in meaning  
between
words like "look," "touch" and "see." And yet Cutsforth was not entirely
misguided in his argument that sensory deprivation restructures the  
mind. In
the 1990s, a series of brain-imaging studies revealed that the visual
cortices of the blind are not rendered useless, as previously assumed.  
When
test subjects swept their fingers over a line of Braille, they showed
intense activation in the parts of the brain that typically process  
visual
input.

These imaging studies have been cited by some educators as proof that
Braille is essential for blind children's cognitive development, as the
visual cortex takes more than 20 percent of the brain. Given the brain's
plasticity, it is difficult to make the argument that one kind of  
reading -
whether the information is absorbed by ear, finger or retina - is  
inherently
better than another, at least with regard to cognitive function. The
architecture of the brain is not fixed, and without images to process,  
the
visual cortex can reorganize for new functions. A 2003 study in Nature
Neuroscience found that blind subjects consistently surpassed sighted  
ones
on tests of verbal memory
<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/test/mental-status-tests/overview.h
tml?inline=nyt-classifier> , and their superior performance was  
caused, the
authors suggested, by the extra processing that took place in the visual
regions of their brains.

Learning to read is so entwined in the normal course of child  
development
that it is easy to assume that our brains are naturally wired for print
literacy. But humans have been reading for fewer than 6,000 years (and
literacy has been widespread for no more than a century and a half). The
activity of reading itself alters the anatomy of the brain. In a report
released in 2009 in the journal Nature, the neuroscientist Manuel  
Carreiras
studies illiterate former guerrillas in Colombia who, after years of  
combat,
had abandoned their weapons, left the jungle and rejoined civilization.
Carreiras compares 20 adults who had recently completed a literacy  
program
with 22 people who had not yet begun it. In M.R.I.
<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/test/mri/overview.html?inline=nyt-c
lassifier>  scans of their brains, the newly literate subjects showed  
more
gray matter in their angular gyri, an area crucial for language  
processing,
and more white matter in part of the corpus callosum, which links the  
two
hemispheres. Deficiencies in these regions were previously observed in
dyslexics, and the study suggests that those brain patterns weren't the
cause of their illiteracy, as had been hypothesized, but a result.

There is no doubt that literacy changes brain circuitry, but how this
reorganization affects our capacity for language is still a matter of
debate. In moving from written to spoken language, the greatest  
consequences
for blind people may not be cognitive but cultural - a loss much  
harder to
avoid. In one of the few studies of blind people's prose, Doug Brent, a
professor of communication at the University of Calgary, and his wife,  
Diana
Brent, a teacher of visually impaired students, analyzed stories by  
students
who didn't use Braille but rather composed on a regular keyboard and  
edited
by listening to their words played aloud. One 16-year-old wrote a  
fictional
story about a character named Mark who had "sleep bombs":

He looked in the house windo that was his da windo his dad was walking
around with a mask on he took it off he opend the windo and fell on  
his bed
sleeping mark took two bombs and tosed them in the windo the popt his  
dad
lept up but before he could grab the mask it explodedhe fell down  
asleep.

In describing this story and others like it, the Brents invoked the  
literary
scholar Walter Ong, who argued that members of literate societies think
differently than members of oral societies. The act of writing, Ong  
said -
the ability to revisit your ideas and, in the process, refine them -
transformed the shape of thought. The Brents characterized the writing  
of
many audio-only readers as disorganized, "as if all of their ideas are
crammed into a container, shaken and thrown randomly onto a sheet of  
paper
like dice onto a table." The beginnings and endings of sentences seem
arbitrary, one thought emerging in the midst of another with a kind of
breathless energy. The authors concluded, "It just doesn't seem to  
reflect
the qualities of organized sequence and complex thought that we value  
in a
literate society."

OUR DEFINITION of a literate society inevitably shifts as our tools for
reading and writing evolve, but the brief history of literacy for blind
people makes the prospect of change particularly fraught. Since the  
1820s,
when Louis Braille invented his writing system - so that blind people  
would
no longer be "despised or patronized by condescending sighted people,"  
as he
put it - there has always been, among blind people, a political and even
moral dimension to learning to read. Braille is viewed by many as a  
mark of
independence, a sign that blind people have moved away from an oral  
culture
seen as primitive and isolating. In recent years, however, this  
narrative
has been complicated. Schoolchildren in developed countries, like the  
U.S.
and Britain, are now thought to have lower Braille literacy than those  
in
developing ones, like Indonesia and Botswana, where there are few
alternatives to Braille. Tim Connell, the managing director of an
assistive-technology company in Australia, told me that he has heard  
this
described as "one of the advantages of being poor."

Braille readers do not deny that new reading technology has been
transformative, but Braille looms so large in the mythology of blindness
that it has assumed a kind of talismanic status. Those who have residual
vision and still try to read print - very slowly or by holding the  
page an
inch or two from their faces - are generally frowned upon by the  
National
Federation of the Blind, which fashions itself as the leader of a civil
rights movement for the blind. Its president, Marc Maurer, a voracious
reader, compares Louis Braille to Abraham Lincoln
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/abraham_lincol
n/index.html?inline=nyt-per> . At the annual convention for the  
federation,
held at a Detroit Marriott last July, I heard the mantra "listening is  
not
literacy" repeated everywhere, from panels on the Braille crisis to
conversations among middle-school girls. Horror stories circulating  
around
the convention featured children who don't know what a paragraph is or  
why
we capitalize letters or that "happily ever after" is made up of three
separate words.

Declaring your own illiteracy seemed to be a rite of passage. A vice
president of the federation, Fredric Schroeder, served as commissioner  
of
the Rehabilitation Services Administration under President Clinton and
relies primarily on audio technologies. He was openly repentant about  
his
lack of reading skills. "I am now over 50 years old, and it wasn't  
until two
months ago that I realized that 'dissent,' to disagree, is different  
than
'descent,' to lower something," he told me. "I'm functionally  
illiterate.
People say, 'Oh, no, you're not.' Yes, I am. I'm sorry about it, but  
I'm not
embarrassed to admit it."

While people like Laura Sloate or the governor of New York, David A.
Paterson
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/david_a_paters
on/index.html?inline=nyt-per> , who also reads by listening, may be  
able to
achieve without the help of Braille, their success requires  
accommodations
that many cannot afford. Like Sloate, Paterson dictates his memos, and  
his
staff members select pertinent newspaper articles for him and read them
aloud on his voice mail every morning. (He calls himself  
"overassimilated"
and told me that as a child he was "mainstreamed so much that I
psychologically got the message that I'm not really supposed to be  
blind.")
Among people with fewer resources, Braille-readers tend to form the  
blind
elite, in part because it is more plausible for a blind person to find  
work
doing intellectual rather than manual labor.

A 1996 study showed that of a sample of visually impaired adults,  
those who
learned Braille as children were more than twice as likely to be  
employed as
those who had not. At the convention this statistic was frequently cited
with pride, so much so that those who didn't know Braille were sometimes
made to feel like outsiders. "There is definitely a sense of peer  
pressure
from the older guard," James Brown, a 35-year-old who reads using
text-to-speech software, told me. "If we could live in our own little
Braille world, then that'd be perfect," he added. "But we live in a  
visual
world."

When deaf people began getting cochlear implants
<http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/specialtopic/cochlear-implant/overv
iew.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  in the late 1980s, many in the deaf
community felt betrayed. The new technology pushed people to think of  
the
disability in a new way - as an identity and a culture. Technology has
changed the nature of many disabilities, lifting the burdens but also
complicating people's sense of what is physically natural, because  
bodies
can so often be tweaked until "fixed." Arielle Silverman, a graduate  
student
at the convention who has been blind since birth, told me that if she  
had
the choice to have vision, she was not sure she would take it.  
Recently she
purchased a pocket-size reading machine that takes photographs of text  
and
then reads the words aloud, and she said she thought of vision like  
that, as
"just another piece of technology."

The modern history of blind people is in many ways a history of reading,
with the scope of the disability - the extent to which you are viewed as
ignorant or civilized, helpless or independent - determined largely by  
your
ability to access the printed word. For 150 years, Braille books were
designed to function as much as possible like print books. But now the
computer has essentially done away with the limits of form, because
information, once it has been digitized, can be conveyed through sound  
or
touch. For sighted people, the transition from print to digital text has
been relatively subtle, but for many blind people the shift to  
computerized
speech is an unwelcome and uncharted experiment. In grappling with  
what has
been lost, several federation members recited to me various takes on the
classic expression Scripta manent, verba volant: What is written  
remains,
what is spoken vanishes into air.

Rachel Aviv is a Rosalynn Carter fellow for mental-health journalism  
with
the Carter Center and writes frequently on education for The Times.



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