https://longmoreinstitute.wordpress.com/2016/04/11/teaching-the-sighted-about-blindness-in-a-way-that-doesnt-suck-leave-your-blindfolds-at-home/

Teaching the Sighted about Blindness in a Way that Doesn’t Suck (Leave your
Blindfolds at Home!)
Posted by esbeitiks in Uncategorized

For years, well-intentioned teachers have used simulation activities to
teach sighted people about blindness. You put on a blindfold, stagger
around a building for a few minutes, and typically rip the blindfold off at
the end with a newfound gratitude that you aren’t one of those poor, tragic
blind people. Understandably, blind people have criticized this educational
“tool” for causing more harm than good, when all it simulates is the first
few moments of seeing nothing. Who wouldn’t be completely traumatized by
being thrown into the world without learning the many alternative ways of
doing things?

After taking a tour of the state-of-the-art San Francisco LightHouse for
the Blind and Visually Impaired that will open June 10, I am excited to
report that new options are coming, (and you can leave the blindfold at
home!). Just teach your students about the design and access features in
this new building, and maybe if you’re really lucky, like I was, you too
can take a guided tour with project manager Elizabeth Freer (sighted) and
project architect Chris Downey (blind). This lesson will leave sighted
folks with a stronger grasp of how blind people navigate the world and how
really smart design to minimize barriers might make doing it even easier in
the future.

The building is located at 1155 Market street. LightHouse bought the entire
building, but will occupy the top floors 9-11 and rent the other spaces.

Here’s what happens when blind people have the clout and the resources to
call the shots with an appreciation for beauty and a sense of playfulness.
From floor to ceiling, the project team has worked eighteen-hour days to
ensure that the building’s design incorporates what can only be described
as an aesthetic of blind and low vision users. Different textures on the
floor distinguish between highly trafficked paths and workspaces. Lights
and sounds direct people towards exits and determine what direction they
are facing (as 95% of blind or low vision people see light). Acoustic
designs throughout provide important cues, from how to operate the
audio-visual equipment to what else is going on in the community space.

Chris Downey holds white can and wears hardhat next to Elizabeth Freer,
also in hard hat, as they both talk to one of the building workers.
A brief pause on the tour while Chris and Elizabeth test the sound of the
newly installed fans in the training kitchen. Another obstacle: safety from
fires vs. the need to minimize all background noise.

And it isn’t all utilitarian. Wood on the handrails and the edges of tables
are satisfying to touch, just as the floor texture was also chosen so that
cane tips had a pleasant sound and feel for users getting from one of the
plush small offices to one of the many open areas to share coffee and
converse.

Together, every detail lets visitors know that they’re in the center of a
very happening place to be. As blind architect Chris Downey put it for San
Francisco magazine, “We wanted to convey the idea that this is an exciting
place and promote a sense of possibility as opposed to the idea of fear.”

I won’t spoil all the building’s secrets before their big launch, but the
whole experience blew me away (and luckily for me, I will get to visit this
space often as the Longmore Institute partners with the LightHouse to run
Superfest: International Disability Film Festival). After the tour,
Longmore Institute Director Catherine Kudlick remarked, “I was near tears
at a few points. It really feels like the dawn of a new era for blind
folk!” But even better yet, the design team didn’t limit their focus to
blindness and considered all forms of access, for example, for Deaf people,
wheelchair riders, little people, the needs of families. At the Longmore
Institute, we know how challenging this can be from our efforts to maximize
access while designing the “Patient No More” exhibit. Competing
accommodations can be difficult to negotiate, but the art of striking the
right balance is so very worth it when it succeeds, bringing different
disability communities together.

So, educators who feel that impulse to teach your sighted students about
blindness, look to the SF LightHouse instead! When the building opens,
sighted visitors will see people new to blindness training alongside old
hands updating their tech and cooking skills. They’ll see blind staff
people working in nearly every aspect of operations, including Executive
Director Bryan Bashin.

As Paul Longmore once said, “Prejudice is a far greater problem to overcome
than any impairment; discrimination is a bigger obstacle than any
disability.” Here’s to replacing those traditional simulations of blindness
that leave participants feeling sad and dreary with a form of emersion that
teaches something joyous and new.

Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of 
mobile phones / Tabs on:
http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/

To unsubscribe send a message to
accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to