[nabs-l] PRS Transmitters, HELP!!!

bookwormahb at earthlink.net bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Sun Jan 31 03:32:07 UTC 2010


Jamie,

Hope has some good advice.  Keep fighting; demonstrate the inaccessibility of the device.  
You might have to drop the class since you cannot take the quizzes and you'll get a bad grade.  But either way keep at it.  If the DSs doesn't get it and offer a solution, go up the chain of command.  Write a letter to the head of that department.  Also go to the Dean of the school your professor teaches in and bring this to their attention.  The professor should accomodate you.  Finally file a complaint if nothing is resolved in the university.

Ashley

-----Original Message-----
>From: Hope Paulos <hope.paulos at maine.edu>
>Sent: Jan 29, 2010 10:18 PM
>To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list <nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
>Subject: Re: [nabs-l] PRS Transmitters, HELP!!!
>
>Honestly, I'd continue fighting the issue. I've never used a prs devices; 
>however, perhaps you need to demonstrate the inaccessibility of the devices. 
>That way they see your issues  first hand.
>HTH
>Hope and Beignet ----- Original Message ----- 
>From: "Jamie Principato" <blackbyrdfly at gmail.com>
>To: "National Association of Blind Students mailing list" 
><nabs-l at nfbnet.org>
>Sent: Friday, January 29, 2010 4:44 PM
>Subject: [nabs-l] PRS Transmitters, HELP!!!
>
>
>> Hi there,
>>
>> I'm a student at Florida State University. One of my professors this
>> semester is employing the use of PRS (personal response 
>> something-or-other)
>> transmitters for answering pop-quiz questions in class. These are little
>> handheld devices that students use to electronically and instantly submit
>> their answer to the professor in class. They're handy little devices, and 
>> I
>> think it's great that technology is being brought into the classrooms in
>> college, but it is my understanding that they are inaccessible. You need 
>> to
>> be able to see the screen to log in and use them, even if you managed to
>> memorize what every single button is for, and as a blind student, I can't 
>> do
>> that.
>>
>> I've had professors use these in the past, and every time, an alternative
>> was offered to me since the professor understood that the device was
>> inaccessible. I would usually either approach my professor and simply tell
>> him my answer and he'd write it down, or I would type it and e-mail it to
>> him (the latter only when there was internet in the classroom or lecture
>> hall). This time, however, my professor does not want to cooperate. He
>> insists that I find a way to use the PRS transmitter, and when I contacted
>> my university's Disability Resource Center, they told me I should be able 
>> to
>> do it as well, but I can't figure out what they expect me to do. I don't
>> think it's right or fair for me to rely on another student to log me in 
>> and
>> select answers for me.
>>
>> I was wondering if anyone else has had to use PRS transmitters in their
>> classes, and if so, how did you do it?
>>
>> Thanks for the help, and please write back soon. I've already missed
>> pop-quizzes, so this is becoming a pressing matter.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> -Jamie
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>
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