as someone with working sight, the signature guide seems pretty useful because mine never end up right lol
@ssjbears
6 ай бұрын
I'm sire you've been asked this before, but wouldn't the slate and stylus require the user to take the notes backwards? And if so, is it hard to flip braille like that, or are many people used to it?
@gillianmcfall3817
6 ай бұрын
Yes, it is backwards. You do get used to it 👍 it’s a little disorienting, but it’s okay.
@Ghost-qk1kt
6 ай бұрын
We spend about half our time writing with mediums that require backward braille anyway. It’s like learning two dialects of the same language. Brain adapts quickly.
@samanthameyer4696
5 ай бұрын
@@gillianmcfall3817this is amazing, is braille writing pretty commonly learned or are the guides with the bars more popular since sighted people can easily read it too?
@gillianmcfall3817
5 ай бұрын
@@samanthameyer4696 I’m not as confident answering for everywhere. But for the area I work in Washington State, braille is provided and supported in the school districts and there are resources through the Department of Services for the Blind (DSB) for those that have eye-related conditions diagnosed later in life as well as for kids. The writing guides are very helpful for signing official documents, sign-ins, etc. that sighted individuals need to read as well. But they are also helpful as a guide for people that have low vision and some functional vision. For the kids I work with in the school district, we start them on braille after they have been evaluated by a Teacher of Blind/Low Vision Learners (TBLV) and found to need more than just enlarged print materials. Reading print above a certain size of font reduces the fluency and speed a student can read text by a lot.
@frost1183
5 ай бұрын
@@Ghost-qk1ktawww I’m glad! That’s good to hear there are tools out there! (:
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