Utah V.I.com

Blind Braille


Scholastic Paperbacks

Braille


Louis Braille: The Boy Who Invented Books for the Blind (Scholastic Biography)

Margaret Davidson (Paperback) Scholastic Paperbacks 1991-06-01

Condition: New
Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!
ISBN13: 9780590443500


Price: $4.99

Answers

Why can't the big lottery provide braille to blind people?
DSC_0527

I am sick of being able to get material in foreign languages but not in braille, I am a blind person and certainly feel I'm disadvantaged because I'm not able to get material in a format suitable to my needs. Whats happened to the DDA, does this not apply now we have numerous foreign people coming into the UK?
I do live in the UK and have requested braille on numerous occasions. Under the DDA companies are supposed to provide this, as they do for foreign languages


Well if you live in the UK, you can get braille. My dad has access to braille. Get in touch with RNIB. You can also get audio books.

Blind Braille


Humor story from past regarding Blind Braille Text This is a story about McDonald in Tucson, AZ. There is a school for the deaf and blind. The ...

How does a person who is both deaf and blind ever learn braille?
DSC_0696

I'm just wondering how, a friend of mines wife had a baby a couple months ago and he was born both deaf and blind unfortunately, how is it some deaf and blind people can read braille, how do they understand how to read it originally if they can't hear a person explain to them? If someone is deaf/blind from birth how would they ever know?


Giving the answer "Helen Keller" doesn't explain how to teach someone!

You start with the basics -- nouns. Water, for instance. Repetition is key. Instructors do hand-on-hand signing, which is when they introduce the subject to an object (ie, they put the child's hands in water) and then the instructor puts her hands on the child's hands and shows the child how to make the "sign" for water. Over and over, until the child learns what she is doing and what it means. Repeat this for all sorts of nouns. Then concepts can be taught, when vocabulary is built. This helps the child communicate to normal people. But since the child cannot see, normal people must be able to spell out words into the child's hands, or offer them braillle, to communicate with them. So, once the child can sign and understands what objects are, spelling can be taught. So the instructor will put the childs hands into water, for example. The child does the sign for water, and the instructor confirms that the child is right. Then the instructor will introduce the braille "spelling" of it, or, as with helen keller, teach the child the alphabet and spell out each letter into the child's hand. Again, repetition is key.

This could take decades to perfect, but children are resilient and human beings require communication, so the motivation to learn is there. There are also tools available now, special hearing aids that create vibrations in the ear and while the child doesn't "hear" what we hear, they can hear noises and such. You should research the story of Emma, Zoe and Sophie Hooker, they are deaf-blind triplets. Their story aired two days ago on Discovery Health.

how do blind people find braille on signs if they cant see the sign?
DSC_0413

why is there braille on signs on walls etc because wouldnt the blind person have to have seen it to know where it is on the wall?


I never knew that. And also sometimes at the crosswalks they have those special buttons for blind people to cross and they have a sound or something, I never understood those because I though that if a blind person was walking around to find the yellow button he/she'd walk in the street and die.

Braille signs for the blind. How do blind people know they're there in the first place?
DSC_0454

Not trying to be inflamatory here. It has always puzzled me.
You see signs in public buildings directing people to departments, and below the writing, you see the same message in braille fro the blind.
But how does a blind person know there is a sign there to feel in the first place?


This depends to some degree on how well thought out it has been.

In the well thought out designs - a good example here might be the braille signs for push/pull on door handles - it is intuitive because they can detect the door (with their stick or their dog - or in some cases they can still see the door but not well enough to read things and are still considered legally blind) and will reach out their hand to open it and find the braille.

In the poorly thought out designs - such as the drive through ATM's or perhaps braille on an overpass sign - well, I guess it just demonstrates that artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity!

How do people that are blind find braille?
DSC_0702

You see braille everywhere in public places. I am just wondering how they even find it to read it?
This is a serious question.


Easy. Standardized placement. If you look closely, the Braille is for the most part in the same places on signs.
Hotel/Motel room signs are at the same height and distance from the doors.
ATM signs are about the same.
Universal placement means not having to touch everything just to "see" where it is or what it says.


  • Buy Cheap

  • ENTERTAINMENT: Braille version of Harry Potter released for blind ...

    So, it’s busy time at the Braille press. Punching, proofing and reprinting several hundred copies of the Harry Potter edition is not an easy thing to do. Once all this is complete, about 500 copies of 13-volume stack gets ready to be shipped out. The stack is more than a foot high. I am sure it’s been a long day for employees at the Braille Press. I think this is probably the first time I am actually hearing about the Braille version of Harry potter. The braille versions will have the same price tag as that of the non braille versions. They will be priced at little under 30 dollars which, the company thinks is nominal. Books like Harry Potter will hopefully increase the Braille customers.