[nabs-l] National Federation of theBlindApplaudsNewJerseyRuling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child

Joshua Lester jlester8462 at students.pccua.edu
Sun May 13 02:07:10 UTC 2012


I know!
Blame the Braille Authority of North America!
Blessings, Joshua

On 5/12/12, Sophie Trist <sweetpeareader at gmail.com> wrote:
> They're trying to get rid of Nemeth? But don't they realize that
> the mathematical system will be screwed without Nemeth?
>
>  ----- Original Message -----
> From: Joshua Lester <jlester8462 at students.pccua.edu
> To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
> <nabs-l at nfbnet.org
> Date sent: Sat, 12 May 2012 20:22:14 -0500
> Subject: Re: [nabs-l] National Federation of
> theBlindApplaudsNewJerseyRuling on Braille Instruction for Blind
> Child
>
> Good grief!
> Since we're discussing Braille, what's the latest on one of our
> famous
> Braille codes, the Nemith code?
> Are they still trying to get rid of it?
> Thanks, Joshua
>
> On 5/12/12, Sophie Trist <sweetpeareader at gmail.com> wrote:
>  OMG, I'm so sorry, Chris. (Sophie smacks herself in the head
> with
>  her cane.) That's the thing about e-mails. Please forgive me. :)
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>  From: Chris Nusbaum <dotkid.nusbaum at gmail.com
>  To: National Association of Blind Students mailing
>  list<nabs-l at nfbnet.org
>  Date sent: Sat, 12 May 2012 18:22:53 -0400
>  Subject: Re: [nabs-l] National Federation of the
>  BlindApplaudsNewJerseyRuling on Braille Instruction for Blind
>  Child
>
>  Sophie,
>
>  I agree.  I took Marc's statement to mean that totally blind
>  people could in fact read and write, just with audio technology
>  (e.g.  text-to-speech software.) As I said in my previous email,
>  my point was that we couldn't read or write independently (when
> I
>  say "read," I mean reading
>  written text, as sighted people read print,) without Braille.
> If
>  a low-vision person has enough vision to read large print, of
>  course, they could read the written word independently in that
>  format.  But sometimes, even for low-vision people, reading
> large
>  print becomes a tedious and difficult process, making it
>  necessary for them to learn Braille in order for the process of
>  reading and writing to be more efficient.
>
>  By the way, I'm a guy! :)
>
>  Chris Nusbaum
>
>  "For we walk by faith, not by sight."
>  2 Corinthians 5:7
>
>  Sent from my BrailleNote
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>  From: Sophie Trist <sweetpeareader at gmail.com
>  To: National Association of Blind Students mailing
>  list<nabs-l at nfbnet.org
>   sent: Thu, 10 May 2012 15:06:25 -0500
>  Subject: Re: [nabs-l] National Federation of the Blind
>  ApplaudsNewJerseyRuling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>  Marc,
>
>  I believe that when Chris said, "Without braille, we couldn't
>  read or write,", she was speaking of the totally blind.  From
>  your
>  e-mail, I gather that you still have a good bit of my vision
>  left.  I am completely blind, so there is no possible way that I
>  could learn print.  Okay, I can learn to sign my name, but
> that's
>  about it.  So for those of us who are totally blind or whose
>  vision is not reliable enough for them to read print (sorry, but
>  I think you're a minority on this list), without braille, we
>  could not read or write.
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>  From: Marc Workman <mworkman.lists at gmail.com
>  To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
>  <nabs-l at nfbnet.org
>  Date sent: Thu, 10 May 2012 08:40:45 -0700
>  Subject: Re: [nabs-l] National Federation of the Blind Applauds
>  NewJerseyRuling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>  I guess I'm in a small minority of those who had Braille forced
>  on them as a child.  I resisted it with every argument an eight
>  year old can muster.  At several times throughout my primary and
>  secondary education, I was made to learn and relearn Braille
> even
>  though I didn't use it then and have rarely used it since.
>
>  Please don't misunderstand me, I'm not saying I was right to
>  resist.  There are lots of things that children resist learning
>  for one reason or another (e.g.,second and third languages,
>  musical instruments, dance), and all of these skills contribute
>  to the production of a more well-rounded and talented person.
>  Braille falls into this category for me.  Knowing it better
> would
>  likely help me get a job, but so too would being more fluent in
>  french, particularly in Canada.
>
>  Where I do take issue, and I've expressed this before, is with
>  statements like this one from Chris:
>
>   "Without Braille, we can't read or write."
>
>  And I'm not picking on you, Chris, I could have found others
>  making the same point in this thread.  If Chris's statement is
>  true, then this email and every essay I wrote in my undergrad,
>  masters, and PhD programs were written by someone who is
>  illiterate.  Without being too immodest, I think I write better
>  than a majority of sighted people, and that's not bad for an
>  illiterate person.
>
>  Any child that wants to learn Braille or any parents that want
>  that for their children should receive the instruction they
>  desire.  Adults too should receive the support to learn Braille
>  if
>  they so desire.  What I think is worth pointing out is that
>  Braille isn't necessary for blind people to be able to read and
>  write, Braille isn't necessary for blind people to be
> successful,
>  and in some cases, mine in particular, the dozens of hours spent
>  learning Braille may more effectively be spent learning other
>  skills.
>
>  Cheers,
>
>  Marc
>  On 2012-05-08, at 5:41 PM, Chris Nusbaum wrote:
>
>   A big amen to that! I couldn't have said it any better! I was
>  actually
>   having a similar conversation with my school librarian today,
>  who asked me
>   whether I saw Braille withering away with the advancement of
>  audio
>   technology.  I told her I didn't, and even if I could see that
>  happening, I
>   wouldn't want it.  Why do I not see Braille going away? Because
>  there are
>   enough blind people who are passionate about Braille to prevent
>  that from
>   happening! Why would I want Braille to continue as the primary
>  source of
>   reading and writing for the blind? Because reading books in
>  audio format,
>   although it is a good method for reading materials sometimes,
>  isn't true
>   literacy.  Braille is our form of literacy.  Without Braille,
> we
>  can't read or
>   write.  This means that we can't get a job, or go to college,
> or
>  keep up with
>   our sighted peers.  So, I think we definitely still need
> Braille
>  because it
>   is our form of literacy, and if we get rid of Braille, we
> should
>  get rid of
>   print too!
>
>   Chris
>
>   -----Original Message-----
>   From: nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org
>  [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
>   Of Arielle Silverman
>   Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 10:42 PM
>   To: National Association of Blind Students mailing list
>   Subject: Re: [nabs-l] FW: National Federation of the Blind
>  Applauds
>   NewJersey Ruling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>   It's sad that this required three years of legal contention to
>  resolve.
>   What's even sadder is that for thousands of other children,
>  these battles
>   aren't being won in the end or even being fought in the first
>  place.  Parents
>   capitulate to the professionals' insistence that their child
>  doesn't need
>   Braille, or they want to fight but don't have the time, energy
>  or legal
>   resources to stick it out.
>   The saddest thing of all, and an irony too, is that so much of
>  the denial of
>   Braille instruction is being perpetrated by the very people
>  entrusted to
>   promote and teach Braille--teachers of the blind! I just read a
>  few weeks
>   ago about a preschool child whose TVI refused to provide her
>  with Braille
>   copies of the storybooks her classmates were given in school.
>  Instead, the
>   teacher thought it sufficient to give the child stuffed toys
>  representing
>   the characters in the stories.  I can understand using toys to
>  substitute for
>   the pictures, but if the sighted kids are getting copies of the
>  stories, why
>   not give the exact same content to the blind child as well? I
>  might add that
>   in today's electronic world, and even before computers existed,
>  transcribing
>   a book for preschoolers is not difficult.  And even in this
> case
>  with the
>   Millers, the NJ Commission for the Blind backed the school's
>  decision not to
>   provide Braille.  If even the folks who are charged to teach us
>  literacy
>   don't stand behind Braille, who will? In my opinion a certified
>  teacher of
>   blind children who refuses to teach Braille, or who refuses to
>  hold their
>   students to competitive reading standards, is not deserving of
>  that
>   certificate.
>   I sincerely hope that this victory will set a meaningful
>  precedent to bring
>   about big changes for those parents who are fighting for
> Braille
>  today and
>   in the future.
>   Arielle
>
>   On 5/7/12, Joshua Lester <jlester8462 at students.pccua.edu>
> wrote:
>   How old is the child?
>   I got Braille instruction, when I was just starting school!
>   Why is it, that they did this, with this child?
>   Any word on how old he is?
>   Thanks, Joshua
>
>   On 5/7/12, Ashley Bramlett <bookwormahb at earthlink.net> wrote:
>   I agree, how  sad.
>
>   -----Original Message-----
>   From: Loren
>   Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 8:09 PM
>   To: 'National Association of Blind Students mailing list' ;
>   blindtlk at nfbnet.org ; nfb-talk at nfbnet.org
>   Subject: Re: [nabs-l] FW: National Federation of the Blind
>  Applauds
>   NewJersey Ruling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>   It's extremely sad that this took 3 years to come to this
>  decision.
>   Would
>   anyone deny a sighted child print instruction for that long?
>   Congrats to the Millers for sticking with it.  You did a great
>  thing for
>   your child.
>
>   Loren Wakefield
>
>
>
>   -----Original Message-----
>   From: nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org
>  [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
>   Behalf Of Chris Nusbaum
>   Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 5:54 PM
>   To: blindtlk at nfbnet.org; 'National Association of Blind
> Students
>   mailing list'; nfb-talk at nfbnet.org
>   Subject: [nabs-l] FW: National Federation of the Blind Applauds
>  New
>   Jersey Ruling on Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>
>
>
>
>   From: Freeh, Jessica [mailto:JFreeh at nfb.org]
>   Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 8:57 AM
>   To: Undisclosed recipients:
>   Subject: National Federation of the Blind Applauds New Jersey
>  Ruling on
>   Braille Instruction for Blind Child
>
>
>
>   FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
>
>
>
>   CONTACT:
>
>   Chris Danielsen
>
>   Director of Public Relations
>
>   National Federation of the Blind
>
>   (410) 659-9314, extension 2330
>
>   (410) 262-1281 (Cell)
>
>   <mailto:cdanielsen at nfb.org> cdanielsen at nfb.org
>
>
>
>
>   National Federation of the Blind Applauds New Jersey Ruling on
>  Braille
>   Instruction for Blind Child
>
>
>   After Three-Year Battle, Hank Miller Will Receive Braille
>  Instruction
>
>
>
>
>   Oceanport, New Jersey (May 7, 2012): After a three-year
>  administrative
>   and
>   legal battle against their local school board, the Oceanport
>  Board of
>   Education, Jeffrey and Holly Miller obtained a ruling (docket
>  number:
>   2011
>   17218) from an administrative law judge that their
>  eleven-year-old son
>   Henry
>   "Hank" Miller was improperly denied instruction in Braille, the
>  reading
>   and
>   writing code for the blind.  The legal victory, obtained with
>  the
>   assistance
>   of the National Federation of the Blind <http://www.nfb.org/
>  (NFB),
>   comes
>   on the heels of
>
>
>
> <http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/speced/Letter%20to%20Secretary%20
>  Duncan%20re
>   %20Braille%20Literacy.pdf> a letter from 26 U.S.  Senators
>  urging
>  the
>   Department of Education to take steps to ensure that blind
>  children who
>   need
>   Braille instruction receive it.
>
>
>
>   Holly and Jeffrey Miller brought the legal case on behalf of
>  their son,
>   Hank, whom they adopted from China and who is blind due to
>  albinism and
>   nystagmus.  Hank has limited vision that allows him to read
>  enlarged
>   print
>   for short periods of time, but he is unable to read for
>  sustained periods
>   of
>   time.  Although Hank's parents continued to tell school
>  officials that
>   their
>   son was experiencing visual fatigue and was having difficulty
>  reading,
>   the
>   school board and its consultant, the New Jersey Commission for
>  the Blind
>   and
>   Visually Impaired (CBVI), insisted that Hank was a proficient
>  print
>   reader,
>   notwithstanding his continued placement in a special resource
>  room for
>   language arts.  In a nearly ten-day hearing, held under the due
>  process
>   provisions of the Individuals with Disabilities Education
>  Improvement Act
>   of
>   2004, Mrs.  Miller testified that she watched Hank routinely
>  struggle with
>   his homework, suffering from eye strain and fatigue, but was
>  unable to
>   convince school officials or the CBVI that Hank needed Braille
>   instruction.
>   She also testified that Hank's schoolwork was not of the same
>  quantity
>   and
>   quality as that of his classmates.  Although experts from the
>  school and
>   the
>   commission claimed that Hank was a "visual learner" and should
>   participate
>   in the "sighted world," experts hired by the Millers and the
> NFB
>   concluded
>   after thorough assessment that Hank could not read print for
>  extended
>   periods of time without eye strain, neck and back pain,
> fatigue,
>  and loss
>   of
>   reading speed and comprehension.
>
>
>
>   In her order, Administrative Law Judge Lisa James-Beavers found
>  that the
>   school board and the commission displayed a clear "bias against
>  Braille."
>   She found that the school board and the commission had failed
> to
>  assess
>   Hank's "sustained reading ability" with print, relying instead
>  on reading
>   assessments involving only brief passages, and citing Hank's
>  alleged
>   failure
>   to complain about struggling to read print.  The judge was
>  unconvinced by
>   the board and CBVI's contention that Hank could rely on audio
>  technology
>   as
>   reading demands increased through his school years, noting that
>  "as
>   pointed
>   out by all of petitioners' well-qualified experts, listening
>  does not
>   equate
>   to reading.  One does not enhance the active skill of
>  comprehending text
>   by
>   passively listening, even if one is following along with the
>  reading."
>   The
>   order noted that "the CBVI failed to do what Oceanport relied
> on
>  them to
>   do,
>   which is to help construct a program that would give H.M.
>  meaningful
>   educational benefit considering H.M.'s future needs."  Judge
>   James-Beavers
>   ordered that Hank Miller be provided with Braille instruction
>  for
>   forty-five
>   minutes, five days a week, and that the school board provide
>  compensatory
>   instruction because of the three years that Hank was not
>  provided with
>   Braille instruction, in the form of intensive Braille summer
>  programs or
>   tutoring.
>
>
>
>   Dr.  Marc Maurer, President of the National Federation of the
>  Blind, said:
>   "Based on the experience of countless parents of blind children
>  and blind
>   adults who had never learned Braille and have contacted us over
>  the
>   years,
>   the National Federation of the Blind has consistently argued
>  that blind
>   children are being improperly assessed and denied Braille
>  instruction
>   when
>   it is clearly appropriate.  Now after a thorough and
>  comprehensive
>   examination of the evidence in Hank Miller's case, an
>  independent judge
>   has
>   confirmed what we always knew.  We hope that school and agency
>  officials
>   across the nation take note of this landmark ruling and commit
>  to giving
>   blind children access to Braille, the true key to literacy for
>  the vast
>   majority of children who are blind or losing vision.  The
>  National
>   Federation of the Blind will continue to stand with families
>  like the
>   Millers who find themselves pitted against the educational
>  establishment
>   in
>   obtaining the equal education to which their children are
>  entitled and
>   which
>   they deserve."
>
>
>
>   Holly Miller, Hank's mother, said: "I am obviously thrilled
> with
>  this
>   ruling, although I am still saddened that it took such a
>  prolonged battle
>   to
>   achieve it.  I am stepping forward to tell Hank's story in
> hopes
>  that
>   other
>   parents of blind children will not have to struggle as we did.
>  I thank
>   the
>   National Federation of the Blind and all of the individuals and
>  experts
>   who
>   came forward to assist in this case.  I plan to strongly and
>  publicly
>   advocate with the National Federation of the Blind for Braille
>   instruction
>   for blind children."
>
>
>
>   The plaintiffs are represented in this matter by Sharon
>  Krevor-Weisbaum
>   of
>   the Baltimore firm Brown, Goldstein, and Levy, and Jayne M.
>  Wesler of the
>   Cranbury firm Sussan and Greenwald.
>
>
>
>   For more information about the National Federation of the
> Blind,
>  please
>   visit www.nfb.org <http://www.nfb.org/> .  For more information
>  about
>   Braille, the reading and writing code for the blind, please
>  visit
>   www.braille.org <http://www.braille.org/> .
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>   ###
>
>
>
>
>
>   About the National Federation of the Blind
>
>
>
>   With more than 50,000 members, the National Federation of the
>  Blind is
>   the
>   largest and most influential membership organization of blind
>  people in
>   the
>   United States.  The NFB improves blind people's lives through
>  advocacy,
>   education, research, technology, and programs encouraging
>  independence
>   and
>   self-confidence.  It is the leading force in the blindness
> field
>  today and
>   the voice of the nation's blind.  In January 2004 the NFB
> opened
>  the
>   National
>   Federation of the Blind Jernigan Institute, the first research
>  and
>   training
>   center in the United States for the blind led by the blind.
>
>
>
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