756 Comments for Broadacres Hospital
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
This is a very awsome site! I have spent, at different times in my life, time in this or that state run school, the state school for the blind, both a state run and privately run training and adjustment center for blind adults and 2 1 month training classes at guide dog school.
I've seen and heard lots of things, especially aat the school for the blind that has been truely awful. Abuse, mistreatment of students who could not defend themselves things like that. There are some awful awful people who mistreat people just because they can. But there are a lot of people who care about their job and the people thy are meant to help. Some of my fondest memories are from the times I was at the school for he blind. Anyway...
I'd like to point up a slight correction re the invention of Braille... Braille wa invented by a blind man, Louis Braille, who lived, who lived in France. When he was a small boy he was playing with his father's leather working tools and lost the sight of ne eye as a result of, well poking his eye out. On accident. He retained vision in the remaining eye for a very short time but lost that eye as well, a result of sympethic opthalmia (sorry I am not the world's most gifted spellers). Louis attended a school for the blind. There have been a number of reading/writting codes for the blind. But Louis wanted to have one system any blind person anywhere could learn... He got the idea of what we today know as Braille from ships of all places. These shipswell the people on the ships didn't want enemies, I'm guessing this was in a time of war or something to spot where they were. So they'd pass pages with these raised dots around and it could be read without the use of light, thus keeping the bad guys in the dark. Louis addapted that system into Braille. It is composed of 6 raised dot. 2 collumns with 3 dots per collumn. Sort of like a cupcake bake sheet. Depending on the configureation and the location in the cell (there are "upper cell" and "lower celll" configurations one can write, in Braille, nearly anything one could write in print. Numbers are made by using the number sign, the lowest dot dot on the left side (when you read) and all three dots on the right, it looks like a backwords print letter L followed by any letters on their own or together the letters A to J A is 1, B 2, C, 3 and so n. J is the number zero. So, to braille, for example the year 2007 you would write the number sign and then the letters B J J G with no spaces... The Braille cell is small enough to fit under one finger tip and for most people they'll read with their pointer finger. Some people, I am not one of them, can read 2 lines at once. Reading speeds for Braille can be the same or much faster than the reading speed sighted people have for print, same with brailleing, this s how we write Braille. Brailleing speeds can be as quick if not quicker than typing speeds... Braille can be done in 2 ways. The oldest, and the one most closely related to a pin and paper is the slate and stylus. The slate is a frame, it can be metal, wood, plastic. This frame is hindged on one side so i's sort of ike a very narrow metal book... It's as wide as a sheet of paper but not as ong, on avrage it only has 4 lines per slate. Anyway you open the hendged slate, slip the paper inbetween the front and back plates and you are ready to write! The slates, well most of the ones I've used have mall pegs on the corrners of one of the plates to hold the paper tightly. It also helps n keeping your place as you go along down he age. You put the top pegs into the holes left by he ottem pegs til you reach the bottem... Slate writting can be a bit of a challenge as you must write "backwords" The word order is the same. You'd still write "my dog has fleas they bite his knees." only the way you'd form the etters would be reversed. Example, the letter L when you read it it is all three dots going down the rightsside of the cell. When you use the slate and stylus you'd make all three dots in a ollumn but you'd write in the left most portion of the cell. There is also braille writers. These are most like typewritters for print. The brailler has three keys on the left side, a space bar in the center and three keys on the right, they are n a straight row there are two smaller keys located higher up, these are for backspacing and dvancing the page up a line. This IMHO is the more easy way to write braille becase you don't have to think how a letter is reversed. If ou ant to write a L you ust mash down all three keys on he right hand side of the brailler...
Each country or language has their own braille codes, there is American Braille, British Braille, German Braille and so n. You can ven do math and sciency stuff with Braille in additio to musical notation... I've been around Braille nearly all my life but didn't get very good at it 'til a few years ago whn I attended an adjustment center for the blind in Colorado. I'm still rather slow at it but can read and write it much better now and at times prefer using it over some other means of communicating... Sorry for the long long history lesson, and poor spelling... It's due in part to somethig's up with my computer not typing all the letters as I type and more because I've always been a crap speller.
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors
- Location: Broadacres Hospital
- Gallery: Meet the Neighbors