DISABILITY IN THE MEDIA Lesson Plan: Braille

Similar documents
Equal Treatment, Equal Access: Raising Awareness about People with Disabilities and Their Struggle for Equal Rights

Helen Keller A Remarkable Woman

Unit 1 A biography of Helen Keller Talking about... Key Vocabulary A biography of Helen Keller lecturer disabilities unmanageable isolate task

PEOPLE LESSONS.com

Guided Reading Level J

Cambridge ESOL Entry 3 Certificate in ESOL Skills for Life

PUSD High Frequency Word List

Contact: Barbara McIntosh Telephone:

What Have I Learned In This Class?

Hieroglyphic Questions

honor of appearing before you today. My name is Susie Trotochaud from the state of Georgia. I

11.) France and the U.S. had a special. A.) independence B.) freedom C.) relationship D.) gift

A Writer s Workshop: Working in the Middle from Jennifer Alex, NNWP Consultant

California Treasures High-Frequency Words Scope and Sequence K-3

Set personal, academic, and career goals. Keep your expectations high.

Passive Voice 11.1 PASSIVE VOICE 11.2 PARTICIPIAL ADJECTIVES. At the Movies Busy Pictures Match Storytime. Reviews Pictures

Grade 8 English Language Arts 90 Reading and Responding, Lesson 9

GRADES: 4-5. Be like the stars of our faith-help care for the church! Tithe. to tithe is to share to tithe is to care

Reading Without Seeing

Support Service Providers for People who are Deaf-Blind

Grade 7: Module 3A: Unit 2: Lesson 1 Introducing the Narrative Arc: The Last Day of Slavery

The Invention of Hugo Cabret: Part I Chapters 1-6

Advanced Composition for Non-Native Speakers of English

I. Content: Describe what it is you will teach. What is the content?

The Summer Reading Challenge evaluation results

Writing a Newspaper Article

Theodore Roosevelt 1906

Target Audience: Intermediate to advanced English and Civics students (NRS levels 4-5)

LESSON TITLE: The Great Commandment. THEME: Love is the fulfillment of the Law. SCRIPTURE: Mark 12:28-34 CHILDREN S DEVOTIONS FOR THE WEEK OF:

KET for Schools Reading and Writing Part 9 teacher s notes

Life Dates: Country of Origin: Russia Musical Era: Romantic

Education of Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students: Perspectives from the Past and Vision for the Future

There are many reasons why reading can be hard. This handout describes

LIFE OF CHRIST from the gospel of

Mother Teresa. Stop and think: Do you think you could do Mother Teresa s work? Explain why or why not.


Frank Abagnale Jr.: The Real Story Behind Catch Me If You Can

People with. Disabilities. To work or not the choice is yours

Assessment of the project

Parable of The Prodigal Son

I Am Rosa Parks. Teacher s Guide for the unabridged audiobook. Introductory Material

INTEGRATING THE COMMON CORE STANDARDS INTO INTERACTIVE, ONLINE EARLY LITERACY PROGRAMS

MODELS OF ACHIEVEMENT EP 8 SEG 1 GENNA

Technical Writing. Preparation. Objectives. Standards. Materials. Grade Level: 9-12 Group Size: Time: Minutes Presenters: 1

Using OK in English. Speaking activities for discourse markers part 1 by Lindsay Clandfield

Classical Music Ludwig Van Beethoven

Mainly, non-muslims information on Islam is based on what they see on television and in the movies.

Types of meaning. KNOWLEDGE: the different types of meaning that items of lexis can have and the terms used to describe these

Koko's Kitten/Dr. Francine Patterson/Created by Long Beach District

Thinking of getting pregnant?

Benchmark C Describe the characteristics of feudal societies and the transition to the Renaissance and Reformation in Europe.

LTEL Fellows Unit Guiding Question: How can we create awareness and educate our school community of teenage issues addressed in Thirteen Reasons Why?

What every older Canadian should know about Having a Will and Making Funeral Plans

Opportunity Awareness Center Martha Raines High School Behavior Transition Program

THE CONTEST BETWEEN THE SUN AND THE WIND. Outcome: Students will learn about Aesop and Aesop s fables.

Baby Signing. Babies are born with an inherent body language that is common to all cultures.

The First U.S. Women's Rights Movement (1800's) By Sharon Fabian

Guiding Question: HOW DO ADJECTIVES IMPROVE WRITING?

Credit Suisse The Accessible Bank

Text-to-Speech and Read Aloud Decision Guidelines Page 1

Start ASL The Fun Way to Learn American Sign Language for free!

Egyptian Pyramids Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Did slaves build the Great Pyramid at Giza?

PERKINS SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND

Summarizing and Paraphrasing

Jack s Dyslexia Index indicates he has dyslexic difficulties that are mild in extent.

YEAR 1: The Human Body and Senses

1. Find a partner or a small team of three or four classmates to work on this lesson.

Disability Etiquette

Little Mermaid. The. The Little Mermaid. by Hans Christian Andersen. Name:

Note: These activities are suitable for students who don t know a lot (possibly nothing at all) about Shakespeare s writing.

United Church of God An International Association. Level 2 Unit 4 Week 4 EIGHTH COMMANDMENT AND TENTH COMMANDMENT

9 Sat 11:30 am Golf with Tom and Harry

LESSON TITLE: Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

miracles of jesus 1. LEADER PREPARATION

1. Title: The Organizational Structure and Powers of the Federal Government as Defined in Articles I, II, and III of the U.S. Constitution Grade 5

Following the Wise Men What s Your Star? Matthew 2:1-12

Economic Cycles EPISODE # 208

Chapter 3: Teaching Learning Strategies in the Learner- Centered Classroom

Vacation Church School. Woman at the Well

PEOPLE LESSONS.com ROWAN (MR BEAN)

Barriers to Communication

Rosa Parks. Stop and think: Have you ever been fed up with a situation? What did you do? How did things change?

** Note: deaf with a lowercase d is often reference to people that cannot here properly

Relationships of a Leader

Lesson One: The Bible An Adventurous Book

Accessible Customer Service. Guide. Providing Services to People with Disabilities

Grade 8 Lesson Peer Influence

How The Teddy Bear Got Its Name By Mikki Sadil

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF COMPUTER SOFTWARE AND BRAILLE LITERACY TO EDUCATE STUDENTS HAVING VISUAL IMPAIRMENT

Murder in the classroom: Teacher s notes

Classroom Behavior Management Plan

Men from the British Empire in the First World War

Confident living. Reading

THEME: Jesus knows all about us and He loves us.

INTEGRATED SKILLS TEACHER S NOTES

At The Department Store

Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors

Transcription:

DISABILITY IN THE MEDIA Lesson Plan: Braille Objective: Materials: Students will be able to explain how the Braille alphabet works. Students will develop a better understanding of the processes used in learning to read by people with visual impairments. Braille alphabet and the Helen Keller message Helen Keller background information Message translation Visual Impairment Activity Worksheet Website pages Vocabulary: advocate tutor Braille visual impairment New York State Learning Standards: Procedure: SS Standard 1: History of the United States and New York State ELA Standard 1: Language for Information and Understanding ELA Standard 2: Language for Literary Response and Expression ELA Standard 4: Language for Social Interaction 1. The teacher should view the Disability in the Media section of the Media wing of the website for background information. 2. Selections from the website can be viewed by the students online or copies of those pages can be printed for student use. 3. Discuss the limitations of a person without sight. 4. Review the Helen Keller and Ann Sullivan story. 5. Ask students, in pairs, to use the Braille alphabet sheet to translate the Helen Keller message and answer the questions on their handout. 6. Have students write their names in Braille. 7. Discuss the meaning of the message and attitudes in general, and the student responses to the questions. Ask students to share their feelings about this topic. Closure/Ticket out the door: List 5 ways your life would be different if you were blind. For historical accuracy and to illustrate changing views of society, words and language used in different eras are part of the website and lessons. No offense is intended toward people with disabilities, their families or advocates.

Name: VISUAL IMPAIRMENT ACTIVITY Use the Braille Alphabet sheet to help you translate the famous quote by Helen Keller. Once you have the translation completed, use your pen point to poke small holes through the dots to feel the alphabet as a person who is blind or has a visual impairment might. With your group, discuss the following questions: 1. What is the real message Helen Keller meant by this quote? 2. What are some possible perceptions of people without visual impairments toward people with visual impairments? 3. How might people with a visual impairment go about doing things differently from people who don t have a visual impairment? 4. What were some of your struggles when trying to interpret Braille? 5. What strategies would you use to learn to read Braille? LP: Braille

DISABILITY IN THE MEDIA Lesson Plan: Braille Answer Key: Helen Keller Quote Translation The chief handicap of the blind is not blindness, but the attitude of seeing people towards them. For historical accuracy and to illustrate changing views of society, words and language used in different eras are part of the website and lessons. No offense is intended toward people with disabilities, their families or advocates.

Helen Keller Biography Helen Keller (1880-1968) Imagine that you couldn't see these words or hear them spoken. But you could still talk, write, read, and make friends. In fact, you went to college, wrote nearly a dozen books, traveled all over the world, met 12 U.S. presidents, and lived to be 87. Well, there was such a person, and she was born over a hundred years ago! Helen Keller at age 7 Meet Helen Keller, a woman from the small farm town of Tuscumbia, Alabama who taught the world to respect people who are blind and deaf. Her mission came from her own life; when she was 1 1/2, she was extremely ill, and she lost both her vision and hearing. It was like entering a different world, with completely new rules, and she got very frustrated. By the time she was 7, her parents knew they needed help, so they hired a tutor named Anne Sullivan. Anne was strict, but she had a lot of energy. In just a few days, she taught Helen how to spell words with her hands (called the manual alphabet, which is part of the sign language that deaf people use.) The trouble was, Helen didn't understand what the words meant until one morning at the water pump (like an outdoor water fountain) she got a whole new attitude. Anne Sullivan Anne had Helen hold one hand under the water. Then she spelled "W- A-T-E-R" into Helen's other hand. It was electric! The feeling turned into a word. Immediately, Helen bent down and tapped the ground; Anne spelled "earth." Helen's brain flew; that day, she learned 30 words.

From then on, Helen's mind raced ahead. She learned to speak when she was ten by feeling her teacher's mouth when she talked. Often people found it hard to understand her, but she never gave up trying. Meanwhile, she learned to read French, German, Greek, and Latin in braille! When she was 20, she entered Radcliffe College, the women's branch of Harvard University. Her first book, called The Story of My Life, was translated into 50 languages. (She used two typewriters: one regular, one braille.) She wrote ten more books and a lot more articles! How did she find the time? Helen also did research, gave speeches, and helped raise money for many organizations, such as the American Foundation for the Blind and the American Foundation for the Overseas Blind, which is now called Helen Keller Worldwide. From 1946 and 1957, she went around the world, speaking about the experiences and rights of people who are blind. She wound up visiting 39 countries on five different continents! Helen also inspired many works of art, including two Oscar-winning movies, and received dozens of awards, such as the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor that an American civilian can receive. She died in her sleep in 1968. Helen became an exceptional leader, once she saw the potential in her own mind. Learn even more about Helen Keller at www.afb.org/helenkeller.asp! For historical accuracy and to illustrate changing views of society, words and language used in different eras are part of the website and lessons. No offense is intended toward people with disabilities, their families or advocates.

Famous Quote by Helen Keller Coded in Braille Sources: o The Foundation for Blind Children (www.the-fbc.org)generously provided the Braille translation of Helen Keller s quotation. o Gallaudet University Library, Deaf Related Resources, http://library.gallaudet.edu/dr/ Equal Treatment, Equal Access 2005 Anti-Defamation League