Well, on a related note,  difference between partially sighted  or low vision 
whatever you call,  and blind, is that whether you are able to use your sight 
anyhow for accomplishing certain tasks or you have to rely on your other senses 
as a  substitute. Braille relies on tactile and technology on audio. both have 
their pros and cones and a judicious use is warranted.



-----Original Message-----
From: accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in 
[mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of Kanchan Pamnani
Sent: Tuesday, December 28, 2010 12:31 PM
To: Access India
Subject: [AI] NYt

David Paterson Learned Without Braille - NYTimes.com

The New York Times


December 26, 2010

For Paterson's Parents, the Choice Was Independence Over Special Education
By
JEREMY W. PETERS

It is a quandary that parents of disabled children grapple with early and 
often: What is the right balance between teaching them self-sufficiency and 
making
sure they have the special accommodations they need?

As Gov.
David A. Paterson
 has discovered, the way parents answer these questions has a tremendous impact 
on how disabled children fare in the adult world.

Mr. Paterson, in recent interviews, has expressed worry about leaving the 
governor's office and learning to live on his own again, after years of relying
on others for a variety of tasks, like guiding him up stairs and reading his 
mail.

He never learned to read
Braille,
as about 50 percent of blind children did at the time he was growing up. 
Instead, he used what little sight he had in his right eye to read with 
high-powered
glasses, attending regular classes in a public school.

That decision was driven by his parents,
Basil A. Paterson
 and Portia Paterson, who were determined to shield him from any stigma and 
insisted that they would not place young David in special education classes.


The teaching of Braille was far more common in the early 1960s, when Mr. 
Paterson, now 56, was entering elementary school, according to the National 
Federation
for the Blind. Now, with the development of technologies like software that 
reads material aloud at high speeds, only 10 percent of blind children learn
Braille.

"Sometimes the argument is 'I don't want my child to be different, so I don't 
want them to learn Braille,' " said Mark A. Riccobono, executive director
of the
Jernigan Institute,
the research and training division of the national federation. "On one level 
there is something to that argument. But in the long term it means they have
fewer tools in their toolbox."

There are no easy answers, of course, about what path is the right one for a 
blind child.

Sheri Wells-Jensen, an associate professor of linguistics at Bowling Green 
State University who is blind, said, "I hated it when I got pulled out of the
mainstream classroom to do something the other kids didn't have to do."

Ms. Wells-Jensen said she eventually came to accept Braille but fully 
understood why children and their parents would resist, because of the common 
misperception
that blind people have extremely limited capabilities.

"If you buy that cultural stereotype, you're not going to want to be seen 
hauling a big old Braille book around," Ms. Wells-Jensen said. "You aren't going
to want to be pulled out of the classroom to learn Braille."

Parents like Mr. Paterson's often go to great lengths to create as normal a 
life as possible for their blind children. The Patersons searched all around
New York City and its suburbs for a school that would not segregate David into 
special education.

When they finally settled on the Hempstead school district on Long Island, 
their son's school had to order large-type textbooks to accommodate him. David
learned to read by putting on his glasses and pressing his face close to the 
page so he could make out the words.

When he tried to learn cursive writing in the third grade, he would stand next 
to the blackboard to see.

To this day, he uses a pair of high-magnification glasses to read letters and 
write personal checks. But he is able to focus on reading and writing for
only a few minutes before the strain overwhelms him. During his years as 
governor, aides have read daily briefings, newspaper articles and personal 
correspondence
into a special voice mail system for him to listen to.

Mr. Paterson, who is proud of the way his parents raised him, said in an 
interview that his life would be no less difficult had he learned Braille 
because
Braille has its limitations, too.

"I don't think things would have been easier for me if I had learned Braille 
because there's a point that you get to in Braille where they can't Braille
everything for you," he said. "You can't Braille the daily newspaper."

While parents want their children to live without the stigma that special 
education classes carry, some experts say that this often plays down the child's
limitations.

"Parents see Braille as saying their kid is really blind," said Diana Brent, 
who is blind and has studied the developmental differences between blind 
children
who read Braille and those who do not.

"I've often thought that partially sighted people might have a harder go of it 
because they're trying to live in two worlds," Ms. Brent said. "I live in
a sighted world, but I function as a blind person. I'm not trying to function 
as if I can see because I never have."

The governor said he was much better at recognizing his limitations now than 
when he was younger. "What you learn as you get a little older," Mr. Paterson
said, "is you really aren't exactly like anyone else."

Mr. Paterson was just 3 months old when he lost most of his vision, as a result 
of an infection. He can see nothing out of his left eye and just shapes,
shadows and colors out of his right.

The governor's mother - despite her insistence that he be treated as a regular 
boy - also helped him recognize that he needed a balance between striving
for independence and asking for help when he needed it.

In the book "Sacred Bonds: Black Men and Their Mothers" by Keith Michael Brown, 
Mr. Paterson tells a story about a conversation he had with his mother after
he had broken his wrist jumping out of his brother's bedroom window to win a $5 
bet.

His mother cautioned him that he could not take risks like other boys, but she 
also urged him to keep going to mobility classes to learn how to get around
more safely.

He recalled her saying to him: "You felt you had to pretend to your friends 
that you don't have a sight problem. I thought that going to this course would
be a message to your friends that you need a little help every once and a 
while."
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