SLATE-MATES Braille
SLATE-MATES Braille
Future Reflections Fall 1992, Vol. 11 No. 4
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SLATE-MATES
Braille Is The Medium For Youngsters' Messages
Editor's
Note: The following article is written by C. L. Rugenstein and is reprinted
from a fall, 1991, issue of the McComb Suburban Sunday newspaper, McComb
county, Michigan.
Pen pals.
The term evokes images of far-away places with strange-sounding names—Dubuque,
Kankakee, Moose Jaw—and new, far-away friends with whom to share experiences
via letters.
Children
especially seem to delight in such correspondence. Among them are 11-year-old
Adam Emerson of Sterling Heights, and Nicholas Wilcox, a 15-year-old who lives
in Ann Arbor. Although both young people are blind, they can reach out and touch
someone by letter through a program called Slate-Mates. It's a New Mexico-based
pen-pal matching service specifically designed for blind youngsters.
Wilcox,
a sophomore at Ann Arbor's Pioneer High School, has been writing Braille letters
to his friend Melody in San Francisco for about a year. Their mutual interests
include computers.
Emerson,
a seventh grader at Rochester Hill Christian School, has written "short
letters to younger kids who don't know Braille that well. I also Braille dymo
tape (clear tape with Braille characters overlaying regular letters) for my
mom." (Sunny Emerson puts out a newsletter for the Michigan Parents of
Blind Children organization.)
Emerson,
who is legally blind but can read with the aid of a powerful magnifying glass,
says "I am not very good at it (Braille)—I only started (writing Braille)
in the fourth grade. I am more used to printing."
To correspond
with one another Slate-Mate kids use a portable Braille-writing device called
a slate and stylus, which is similar to a pencil or pen. The slate is a 12"
by 4" hinged metal or plastic frame that fits on sides of a sheet of paper.
The writer uses the stylus to push Braille dots into the paper, using the slate
as a guide. According to the National Federation of the Blind, the process takes
about the same length of time as printing by hand with a pen or pencil.
"Blind
children want pen pals for the same reason that other kids want them—for
support and encouragement" says Barbara Cheadle, President of the Parents
of Blind Children division of the National Federation of the Blind. "It's
a way to share."
It also
gives children who are blind "someone to talk to about things only another
blind person could understand" says Fred Schroeder, founder-coordinator
of the Slate-Mates program, which he started in 1984. "Braille is an important
skill. We felt this program was a way to stimulate kids to use it," says
Schroeder, who is with the New Mexico Commission for the Blind.
Thus far,
some 150 youngsters from elementary through high school age have joined the
Slate-Mates program, whose primary goal actually is to promote Braille literacy.
Wilcox
routinely uses a slate and stylus for taking notes in school but says writing
to a pen pal has helped his proficiency in reading and writing Braille.
Blind children
interested in joining the free pen pal program may request the Slate-Mate profile
(application) by writing to: Slate-Mates, c/o Fred Schroeder, New Mexico
Commission for the Blind, PERA Building, Room 205, Sante Fe, New Mexico 87503.
Reading
with the fingers
The Braille
writing system was developed in 1820 by a very young Frenchman named Louis Braille.
Braille completed his modification of the system of night writing used aboard
ships by the time he was eighteen years old.
Students
in the school for the blind that Louis Braille attended found that reading and
writing the system of raised dots was easier than reading raised letters which
they could not write at all. But it still took more than a century before Braille
was accepted as a better way for the blind to learn to read and write. Experienced
Braille readers can read at a speed comparable to that of a sighted person,
about 200—400 words a minute.
Adam Emerson,
11, of Sterling Heights, uses Braille to do his math and hopes to become a particle
physicist and a chemist.
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