Seeing No Limits
Seeing No Limits
The Braille Monitor_______December
1997
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Seeing No Limits
by Don Melvin
From the Editor: The following article
appeared in the Atlanta Journal and the Atlanta Constitution on Saturday, August
23, 1997. The subject of this story, Amanda Wilson, is a very determined Federationist
who has read the Braille Monitor for a number of years and clearly understands
the importance of having high expectations. Here is the article about her:
Despite losing her sight and borderline
retardation, Amanda Wilson has managed to attain her master's degree.
Don Wilson doesn't remember anyone speaking
the words aloud, but he remembers what the tests showed.
His daughter Amanda, though, remembers.
She was ten years old, maybe a little
older. Steadily, inexorably, she was losing her sight. And tests conducted at
the Georgia Academy for the Blind in Macon showed she was borderline retarded.
She was not college material, she was
told. Her best bet was to pursue a career as a vendor or perhaps as a telephone
customer service representative.
"I told them I wanted to work with
children," she remembers.
"And they said, `You can't do that.'"
Sunday, Amanda Wilson, now twenty-eight
and nearly totally blind, will be awarded her master's degree in special education
from the State University of West Georgia in Carrollton. With honors.
She plans to work with children--to encourage
them, she says, rather than discourage them.
"I want them to hear that, if they
apply themselves and get proper training, they can be whatever they want to
be," she said.
Wilson has suffered from retinitis pigmentosa,
a hereditary, progressive eye disease, and is legally blind. She struggled through
grade school and even high school, sometimes bumping into things, sometimes
not seeing the blackboard.
This May she returned to the Georgia
Academy for the Blind to apply for a job as a teacher. She was asked, she said,
whether her Seeing Eye dog, a black Labrador retriever named Sison, would be
a distraction in the classroom or whether he had ever shown aggression toward
children.
Wilson did not get the job, but she said
she does not know the reason.
Her father was incensed.
"I guess I thought that they, of
all the people in the world, should
be aware of what a Seeing Eye dog is and what it helps a person accomplish,"
Don Wilson said. "And I was frustrated, amazed, and angry."
Richard Hyer, the director of the academy,
said he does not believe such questions were ever asked. He would not comment
on the academy's evaluations of Amanda Wilson's potential.
"I don't have any comment,"
he said. "I'm not going on the record with you at all."
Amanda's anger only fueled her desire
to succeed.
She has lived independently in Carrollton,
using Sison to guide her.
People read course material to her, her
computer speaks, and the university has a scanning machine that reads printed
material aloud.
Neither she nor her father ever accepted
the evaluations of experts regarding her potential.
"I'm redheaded and hard-willed and
stubborn," Don Wilson said. "And we always said we don't really care
what the experts say. This is what we're going to do."
He would like to take credit for his
daughter's success, but he said he can't.
Fortunately, Amanda plans to return to
her parents' home in White, a town in Bartow County northwest of Atlanta, and
look for a job working with handicapped children.
"I think I'm a determined person
who would like to show disabled people they can be who they want. They can be
independent. It doesn't matter what your disability is; you have to be a person
first."
Her father, meanwhile, expects to shed
tears of pride Sunday when his daughter receives her master's degree.
"I'm more glad than I can live with,
almost," he said. "I'm very proud of her."
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