Timely Textbooks for Blind Kids
Timely Textbooks for Blind Kids
The Braille Monitor
July,
2002
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Timely Textbooks for
Blind Kids
An
Idea Whose Time Has Come
From
the Editor: On April 24, 2002, the Instructional Materials Accessibility Act
was introduced in Congress. Congressman Tom Petri's bill is H.R.4582, and Senator
Chris Dodd's bill is S.2246. More cosponsors are needed on both pieces of legislation,
but both are considered fairly noncontroversial because the American Association
of Publishers worked with us to write the language. The entire blindness field
agrees about the importance of getting this bill signed into law. Federationists
attending the Washington Seminar have been talking about this concept on Capitol
Hill for better than two years, and it finally looks as if we are making real
progress. A Senate hearing is scheduled for the end of June, which will give
the bill some much needed visibility, but it's still important for all of us
to encourage our Representatives and Senators to cosponsor the legislation and
urge that it come to the floor for a vote as quickly as possible.
Several
excellent stories have appeared in the weeks since the April 24 press conference
that was called to mark the introduction of the Instructional Materials Accessibility
Act. Here are a couple of samples. On April 29, the New Haven Register
published a fine one. Here it is:
Dodd
Bill Urges Availability of Learning Materials for Blind
by
Lolita C. Baldor
Jessie Kirchner had to tell her Guilford
High School teacher last week that she couldn't take her history quiz because
about fifty pages of her textbook turned out to be blank.
Kirchner's book is on tape. And because
she is one of more than 900 blind students in the state, she must rely on tapes
or Braille textbooks that can often be outdated or defective.
Last week the high school junior was
in Washington with Senator Christopher J. Dodd, D-Connecticut, to urge support
for federal legislation that would require states to have Braille and other
electronic learning materials available to visually impaired students at the
same time that regular textbooks are given to other students.
Dodd's bill also would create a uniform
electronic format for books to make it easier to convert them to Braille.
"By providing books for the visually
impaired, we can open up new opportunities and horizons for countless Americans,"
said Dodd, whose sister is blind and is a teacher in Connecticut. "This
measure ensures that disabled Americans have equal and fair access to better
educational materials."
According to the National Federation
of the Blind, blind students often must use old textbooks because newer versions
aren't converted to Braille.
Although the Americans with Disabilities
Act requires equal treatment for individuals with disabilities, the law does
not cover publishers, and there are no uniform procedures to convert printed
textbooks into Braille or synthetic speech formats.
"In the absence of a specific
law requiring publishers to support creation of textbooks in Braille, blind
students in community schools are being segregated from the general population,"
said NFB President Marc Maurer.
That
was the New Haven Register story. On May 13 the Boston Globe also
carried a fine piece about the need for this legislation. Here it is:
Lack
of Brailled Textbooks Leaves Blind Students in Bind
by Sandy Coleman
Close your eyes and envision a complex
math problem. Now, solve it, imagining the formulas and graphs‑-without
a book. That's what Newton North High student Tasha Chemel, who is blind, had
to do for three months in her junior math class because the Braille version
of her textbook didn't arrive until after the school year began. The sixteen‑year‑old,
who has been blind since birth, has to have all her textbooks converted to Braille.
Most years she doesn't get them on time.
"One year someone forgot to order
the ones I needed . . . Last year, my history book took forever to come. In
the interim I had to listen to it on tape, which doesn't work very well,"
said Chemel. "It's been a pain." Advocates for the blind say such
delays deny blind or visually impaired students equal access to education. They
are pushing for legislation recently introduced in Congress that would require
states to make sure that such students get their books on time. Publishers would
have to produce electronic copies of textbooks and furnish them to a national
access center for distribution to schools nationwide.
Eileen Curran, director of educational
services for the National Braille Press in Boston, compares the measure to laws
that require schools to build handicapped ramps. "The only thing preventing
a child in a wheelchair from getting a full education is being able to enter
a school. . . . The only piece that is lacking in [visually impaired students']
education is the access to their materials."
Converting printed textbooks into
Braille is so elaborate that it takes about three months. It means textbooks
have to be ordered far in advance of the school year, but officials often have
to wait until budgets are approved in the summer to order books. And sometimes
teachers haven't made their selections or change their minds at the last minute.
In Massachusetts regular textbooks
are converted at the National Braille Press. A transcriber must first turn the
printed material into an electronic format, usually by scanning the pages. However,
scanners often make errors, said Curran.
Advocates and publishers estimate
that there are 90,000 blind or visually impaired students in the country. In
Massachusetts there are about 2,000, 200 of whom are Braille readers.
The numbers may be small, but the
problem is not, said Peter Leofanti, assistant principal and Chemel's math teacher
at Newton North. "The big deal is the state tells us that [blind and visually
impaired students] have to be educated in a mainstream situation," he said.
"I agree with that. But they require a lot of support, and anything that
makes this easier and facilitates it should be considered."
Sometimes, when Brailled books don't
arrive on time, teachers such as Anne Spitz do the Braille themselves on home
machines. That's what she did last year when parts of a reading series didn't
arrive in time for her third‑grade students.
"Parents of sighted children
would be appalled if their children were sitting in class without materials,"
said Spitz, who teaches visually impaired students at Bridgewater Elementary
School. At a time when high standards and literacy are being pushed, no student
can afford to fall behind, she said.
Currently only twenty-six states require
publishers to provide electronic copies of textbooks for visually impaired and
blind students. Massachusetts is not one of them. The big problem for publishers
has been that electronic file format requirements vary from state to state,
making it time‑consuming to produce books in the appropriate format, said
Stephen Driesler, executive director of the school division of the American
Association of Publishers.
"The system has not worked well
for the blind kids. It takes sometimes six months or longer into the school
year to get their books," he said. The new legislation would require publishers
to create only one type of file, saving time and money, he added.
The Instructional Materials Accessibility
Act is currently awaiting committee hearings in Congress. It was introduced
last month by the National Federation of the Blind, along with Senator Christopher
Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut, and Representative Thomas Petri, a Wisconsin
Republican. The American Association of Publishers worked two years with advocacy
groups and educators to draft legislation that all sides could support.
However, it will take up to three
years to set up an electronic access center and cost $1 million to run annually.
Another $5 million will be needed initially to train staff and provide technical
assistance to schools. Moreover, only books published after the legislation
is enacted would be available electronically.
Still advocates hope the legislation
will provide some relief.
At one point this year, when Chemel's
book hadn't arrived, Leofanti improvised, squeezing goo out of a tube to create
graphs that Chemel could feel and study. "We had to do a lot of things
orally, and I had to repeat and repeat," he said. "She's been a very
resilient and resourceful kid. She took it philosophically. She said we'll do
the best we can with what we have."
But Chemel is angry, particularly
as she heads toward college, where the workload will be increased and she may
be facing similar book problems.
"I
should have books as accessible as anyone else," she said. "I shouldn't
have to waste my time chasing down materials. I want to focus on academics."
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