Accessible Test



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Parenting Book


(Continued)
Purpose

To provide visually impaired parents with support and information about parenting techniques that have been effective for other visually impaired parents


Project Staff

Mary T. (Terrie) Terlau, Project Leader

Janet Ingber, Consultant/Author

Kevin E. O’Connor, Consultant

Deborah Kendrick, Consultant

Ann Travis, Research/Project Assistant


Background

Janet Ingber, a blind mother, submitted a draft outline and three chapters of a parenting book based on interviews with 17 effective parents who were visually impaired. Research conducted at APH confirmed that very little information was available for blind parents regarding issues related to visual impairment and parenting. The need for an informational parenting book was further assessed through a survey of professionals in the field of visual impairment and blindness. Survey results indicated that: training was not available for professionals in the area of parenting and visual impairment; there were a significant number of blind parents who could have benefited from information related to blindness and parenting; and a self-help informational book could maximally benefit many such parents or parents-to-be. Of particular concern among survey respondents was the need for support and information to counteract the negative stereotypes about blindness such as the belief that persons with visual impairments could not be effective parents.


To meet the need for accurate information and support for parents with visual impairments, the development of an expanded version of Ingber’s work was undertaken.
A database was developed to record, store, and manipulates information to be obtained from questionnaires and phone interviews. Parent volunteers were recruited through APH Ex Officio Trustees, the APH monthly newsletter, e-mail list announcements, contacts with staff and/or relevant committees of the American Council of the Blind and the National Federation of the Blind, and word of mouth. Parent participants either had raised or were raising at least one child when the parent was legally blind. Parents were also selected because of their interest in and commitment to parenting and because of their desire to share what they had learned with other parents.
Ingber contacted and conducted phone interviews with 62 blind parents. She recorded results of these interviews into the database and submitted this material to the project leader. The project leader completed content analysis and results summaries for the data. Ingber and the project leader have written, edited, and rewritten all chapters of the book based on information obtained from the parent sample. Photos were obtained from Ingber for inclusion in the book.
Work during FY 2009

All chapters were reviewed/edited for consistency of style. Additional photos were sought from all participating parents; scanned photos have been received from four parents; and hard copy photos have been offered by three parents. Two sets of scanned photos are not useable because of low resolution.


Permissions for use of photos have been sent to all parents who sent in photos. Requests for hard copy photos where scans are not useable have been made. Mailers have been provided for parents offering hard copy photos and for those with non-useable photo scans; such borrowed photos will be returned to parents after being scanned at APH
Work planned for FY 2010

Prototype layout will be completed. Three expert reviewers will offer suggestions for revision to ensure that the book reflects current promising practices in the parenting field and viable parenting practices for parents with visual impairments. It is anticipated that revisions will be completed and that this product will become available for sale in FY 2010.



Printing Guide


(Continued)
Purpose

To develop teaching materials and printing templates to assist persons who are blind to learn to print legible capital letters according to positions of the braille dots in a cell


Project Staff

Mary T. (Terrie) Terlau, Project Leader

Monica Vaught, Research Assistant/Co-Project Leader

Linda Ray, Project Consultant

Frank Hayden, Technical Research Division Manager

Tom Poppe, Model/Pattern Maker


Background

Although computers increasingly are being used as a means of written communication on the job and in social and recreational life, production of legible written communication still remains an essential skill. Jotting notes to colleagues, writing a quick comment on a page of printed material, leaving a note on the refrigerator for a family member, and filling in information on a check while shopping are only a few of the tasks that are accomplished more easily with a pen than with a computer.


Some congenitally blind persons have developed legible script and/or print styles. However, many adults who did not have functional vision during primary and elementary grades have not learned to produce print or script letters that sighted persons can read.
Linda Ray, a teacher of the visually impaired, submitted one print teaching method for consideration. With this method, students are taught to shape block print capital letters by connecting dot positions within a braille cell for each letter. Additionally, students are taught to print within a template of lines of rectangular openings. By using this template, cell boundaries can be detected when printing, print remains constant in size, and characters do not drift into one another.
Early research indicated that, though braille dot positions had been used to teach both printing and script writing throughout the blindness field, teaching curricula and materials had been developed primarily for script and not for print. Print samples from persons using Ray’s print teaching method and from persons who had been taught to print using a variation on this method were examined. Preliminary data indicated that, with several significant exceptions, the connecting dots method of print teaching in combination with a printing template resulted in very readable block print. However, when printed with this method, several letters were indistinguishable or ambiguous. It was deemed desirable to develop a system that could eliminate as much ambiguity as possible. Additionally, it was deemed necessary to provide materials that could help students improve their production of diagonal lines.

To resolve ambiguity between block letters of D and O, attempts were made to teach students to draw curves by using templates with curved rather than sharp corners and tracing boards with curved letters. Tracing boards also included K, M, V, W, and Y, to help students learn to draw more complex diagonals.


Results of preliminary field testing showed that curved templates and tracing boards did not help students print curved letters; D-O and 8-B remained indistinguishable. Results also indicated that tracing boards might be helpful for teaching diagonals to some students, but a more streamlined approach to materials development was needed.
To resolve the D-O ambiguity, a Greek Delta character was offered for D; this character is very recognizable and may be easier to produce than the curved D. The small Y and a restructured B were also included. The product was reconfigured to provide one learning page per letter. Each learning page will include a letter description (the braille dot combinations to be connected for that letter), a raised image of the letter shape, and an engraved, pencil-traceable letter. Additional feedback from the field was sought by consulting Sally Mangold and by conducting a focus meeting at the AERBVI International Conference in July, 2004.
Feedback from the field was reviewed and a plan for the project prototype was finalized. As a result of this input, an additional description of each print letter based on position in the cell and not on dot numbers will be included on learning pages. Letters will also be presented in an order that allows students to master simple strokes and then join them into multi-stroke letters. Placement of letter descriptions and of embossed and engraved letter shapes on learning pages was finalized.
Work during FY 2009
The Project leader’s schedule constraints precluded further development of the product prototype during FY 2008 and FY 2009.
Work planned for FY 2010

The project leader will work closely with the model maker to develop product prototypes, which will then be submitted for field review. Field test prototypes for the learning pages will be developed. A guide book for teachers will be written, and a printing template based on the braille slate will be developed. Field testing will be undertaken.





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