From Disability Scoop:
“Braille Is
Everywhere, But Most Kids Who Are Blind Can’t Read It”
The challenger
sat alone at a square folding table in the center of her teacher’s immaculate
living room, stockinged feet whispering against the plush, white carpet, hands
poised over a blue Perkins Brailler — something like a manual typewriter
crossed with a court reporter’s steno machine. To say the Brailler is loud is
an understatement. The force required to emboss Braille paper produces a noise
less like typing and more like repeatedly firing a BB gun. “It’s really loud,”
said contender Lynn Wu, who at the time was a rising freshman at Tesoro High
School in Orange County and a finalist in the 20th annual Braille Challenge, a
showcase for the most talented students who are blind in the U.S. and Canada. The
Scripps National Spelling Bee and other name-brand academic competitions were
canceled last March due to the pandemic, but Braille Challenge organizers
soldiered on, converting the weekend-long championship into 50 individual
contests, most of them in July, hosted by proctors in their homes. This is what
brought Lynn to the Laguna Niguel home of her former teacher Rachel Heuser, who
had taped a poster to her garage to welcome Lynn to the finals. “I don’t know if
you can see it — there’s dots; those represent the Braille (letters) ‘GD,’ and
in Braille, GD is ‘good,'” Lynn explained as she felt her way across the
poster. “Good morning Lynn!” the poster read in 600-point font — and in
Braille. “Good luck today and have fun!” “‘Today’ is ‘TD,'” Lynn continued.
“They’re called short-word contractions — those are some simple ones.” Like the
spelling bee, the Braille Challenge is a test of both literacy and willpower.
Yet its drama is largely extrinsic: Even if this year’s regionals could be held
in public, most observers would find them inscrutable.
A standard
qwerty keyboard has 104 keys. A Brailler has nine — six Braille cells, a
backspace key and two space bars — which together can encode 26 Latinate
letters, 10 Arabic numerals, two dozen Germanic punctuation marks and 200-some
word signs and contractions. It can produce seven volumes of Harry Potter, the
Five Books of Moses and a 3½-pound copy of “Hamlet.” “It’s not that hard,” said
Lynn, a straight-A student and aspiring lawyer. “When you depend on something,
it’s easier to learn it.” Although the device seems ridiculously analogue,
“every single kid learns on a Perkins Brailler,” said professor Yue-Ting Siu,
who runs the visual impairments program at San Francisco State. “It speaks to
how blind kids’ learning is unique from typically sighted kids.” It also speaks
to when and how children who are blind entered public schools, and why their
long tenure there has failed to produce the same gains achieved by students who
are deaf, those with autism and other disabilities.
Lynn is 14. The
Perkins Brailler is 70. It made its debut in 1951, in the midst of a “blindness
epidemic,” caused by oxygen therapy for premature infants, that forced the
rapid integration of students with visual disabilities into American
classrooms. By 1960, when the last of this cohort was entering kindergarten,
more than half of students with blindness could read and write tactile script. Today,
fewer than 10% of Americans with visual disabilities do — perhaps a shock to
many sighted people, who see Braille everywhere. In fact, the Braille dots on
parking meters, bathroom signs and ATMs were already illegible to most
Americans with blindness when the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 put
them there. This steep decline in tactile literacy is what spurred the Braille
Institute, an L.A.-based nonprofit serving people with low vision or blindness,
to launch its Braille Challenge in 2000. “Up until the Braille Challenge, kids
simply were not getting enough access to technology for Braille,” Siu said.
“Right now, with all the technology that’s available, it’s easier than ever to
get Braille under a kid’s fingers.”
Yet blindness
remains such a profound disadvantage, it can push even bright, privileged
students like Lynn from the top to the bottom of our stratified academic world.
Students with visual disabilities finish high school at less than half the rate
of typically-developing children, and even those who earn a bachelor’s degree
find work far less often than their sighted peers. In California, only English
learners, homeless children and foster youth do worse. “When I first went
blind, I was confused about how school would work,” Lynn said. “With just
auditory, you can’t review stuff you learned before, and you can’t read stuff
on your own. Math is really hard to do. I’m in honors algebra and trigonometry,
and I think it would be impossible” without Braille. This is the contest’s
raison d’être, the reason the Braille Challenge forged ahead with its 2020
finals when other academic championships were canceled. While the hurdles faced
by homeless and foster youth are complex, the ones facing children who are blind
are simple. Many experts believe what separates those who succeed from those
who struggle isn’t circumstance or even grit — it’s Braille.
In 1972, the
Supreme Court extended the protections of Brown vs. Board of Education, the
landmark school integration ruling, to students with disabilities. In 1974,
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act made it illegal for any entity receiving
federal funds to exclude any “otherwise qualified individual” because of a
disability. In 1975, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act — now
called the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act — gave students with
disabilities the right to learn in public schools. IDEA’s main mechanism of
enforcement is a document called an individualized education program. “I’ve
been attending my own IEP meetings since seventh grade,” Lynn said. Officials
usually understand her requests for accommodations, “but I don’t know if they
have experience with visually impaired students.” Visual disabilities are rare
compared with autism, ADHD or dyslexia. Deafness is equally uncommon, yet the
law considers American Sign Language just one of several acceptable methods of
instruction. Braille, by contrast, is mandated for all students with visual
disabilities, except where such instruction is “inappropriate” — such as for
those too young to read, or for those who have concomitant disabilities that
make literacy unattainable.
Yet today, only
16% of students who could learn Braille do. Like many other disabilities,
blindness exists on a spectrum: Most people who are considered legally blind
can see some light, color and shape, and many find large print accessible. But
many others who can technically “see” print either strain painfully to read or
lose the ability over time. Lynn is a good example: Though she was born blind
in one eye, she wasn’t introduced to Braille until she lost her sight
completely in fourth grade. “Some teachers think if they can read print, teach
them print,” said Arielle Silverman, a disability researcher and consultant, who
is blind. “But I’ve met at least two dozen people who say they wish they’d been
taught Braille younger. I’ve never met anyone who says, ‘They taught me Braille
when I was 5, and I wish they hadn’t.'” Print and Braille both have their
champions, and technology has made both more accessible in recent years. Yet “a
significant number” of readers who are blind — as many as 20% — are never
taught either, instead learning entirely through audio media. Multiple experts
said they could not imagine a scenario in which audio-only instruction would be
considered “appropriate” under the law. But for students who are blind, the
decision depends on a vanishingly small corps of teachers of the visually
impaired. “There’s not a lot of us out there,” said Keith Christian, a Braille
Challenge proctor and award-winning teacher of students with visual impairment
in Orange County, who is blind. “I’m very fortunate in that I have a classroom.
Others serve kids on an itinerant basis,” meaning they rove from school to
school, sometimes across districts, working with children in mainstream
classrooms. “It’s a really big challenge, because we want kids to be
assimilated.”
Itinerant
teachers were introduced in the 1960s, as part of an ad hoc education program
that predates legal integration by a decade. They appeared at a time when
blindness was far more common in children than it ever had been or would be
again, as part of a system meant to help districts quickly assimilate students
who had been excluded for the whole century prior. When Congress created the
right to “an individualized and appropriate education” for students with
disabilities, the system for educating students with blindness had already
ossified around the needs of administrators. Today, the majority of students who
are blind or have visual impairment in California are served by itinerant
teachers, some of whom have caseloads almost 10 times the state’s recommended
maximum, experts say. Many such teachers are themselves students, working under
intern or emergency licenses, sometimes without oversight, often before they
have functional literacy in Braille or the training to assess whether their
students should learn it. Virtually none are working below double capacity, as
defined by California’s revised 2014 standards. Legally, the teacher shortage
shouldn’t affect which format students learn. But functionally, it often does.
For those who rely on Braille, the Braille Challenge helps bolster the “free
appropriate public education” guaranteed but rarely delivered under the law. “If
you compete, it gives you a standpoint, a benchmark for how you compare to
other people,” Lynn said. “At my school, only I use Braille, so I didn’t know
if I was fast or not, or if I was proficient or not. I had no one to compare
to.” It was a remarkably adult statement for a girl who celebrated the end of
her Braille Challenge exams by rolling in the grass with a guide-dog puppy
named Zamboni. “Is he cute?” Lynn asked her 4-year-old sister Lauren, who
squealed with delight when the dog licked her hand. “Did he give you a kiss?”
Experts say
that attitude is not unusual among Gen Z teens and their families. Though the
Braille Challenge is niche by definition, bees, bowls and brain sports are more
popular among Zoomers than they’ve been in any previous generation. In a
typical year, 11 million middle-schoolers fight for a seat at the Scripps
National Spelling Bee, 2.5 million vie for the National Geographic Bee, and at
least 100,000 battle through Mathcounts — and those are just the competitions
that are televised. “Some of these kids are in highly ranked, highly resourced
schools, and the parents still say the school doesn’t do enough,” said Pawan
Dhingra, a professor of American studies at Amherst College and the author of
“Hyper Education: Why Good Schools, Good Grades, and Good Behavior Are Not
Enough.” “If you don’t trust the school to educate your kid, you have to take
it on yourself. Academic competitions become a great venue for that.” The
pandemic appears to have cemented those beliefs, despite the many crushing
cancelations in 2020. With a few prominent exceptions, most bees will be back
in 2021, following much the same road map the Braille Challenge charted last
year when it made its finals remote. The Scripps spelling bee launched its own
online testing system, while Mathcounts and other prestige STEM contests have
adopted the Art of Problem Solving’s digital competition platform. “There was a
time where I don’t think there was so much social life built around the
contest. So in a way it’s a return to that, but in a very different era,” said
Shalini Shankar, a professor of anthropology and Asian American studies at
Northwestern University and the author of “Beeline: What Spelling Bees Reveal
About Generation Z’s New Path to Success.” “I think it’s going to run much more
like a pure education contest.”
Braille
Challenge regionals are typically an all-day affair, one of few opportunities
kids like Lynn have to socialize with peers who have visual disabilities.
Friendly rivals from San Diego to Santa Barbara flock to Fullerton to test
their skills in speed and accuracy, spelling, proofreading, reading
comprehension and charts and graphs. Novices are welcome. The atmosphere
tingles with flat Coke and teen nerves and overinflated balloons. Organizers
tried to infuse the Braille Challenge awards ceremony with excitement when it
was livestreamed on YouTube. But during the pandemic, without the lukewarm
pizza and lifelong friendships to soften it, the whole project seemed suddenly,
terribly grown-up. “Unfortunately, nearly two-thirds of all working-age people
with disabilities are not in the labor force,” David D’Arcangelo, head of the
Massachusetts Commission for the Blind, told the winners. “I want you to be in
the labor force because I believe that leads to more dignity, more independence
and more chances at prosperity for you. Your Braille literacy skills put you
one step closer down your path to employment.” When Lynn won third place a few
minutes later, there wasn’t even applause. She was one of 10 finalists winnowed
down from hundreds of competitors. Yet for her and other Zoomers, the lure of
bee season has never been stronger. “There’s no other contest like it,” Lynn
said recently. “It’s a great experience.” She is already taking practice tests
for the 2021 regionals, which start this month.
^ I did not realize
this was an issue, Now I do. ^
https://www.disabilityscoop.com/2021/02/19/braille-everywhere-most-cant-read/29202/
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