Tag Archive

Education

Looking for Android Smartphone Users to Test New BlindShell Interface

This fall BlindShell, a Czech start-up, presented their new, easy-to-use smartphone interface to the LightHouse Labs group while in town for TechCrunch Conference. Their goal is to offer a simple, cheap and intuitive smartphone solution for blind and visually impaired users.

We’re looking for people willing to give feedback on the new system in exchange for the free software. By collaborating with The Czech Blind Union and The Vodafone Foundation, BlindShell has developed an application that uses simple, intuitive touch gestures to access the Android system. It includes functions such as calling, messages, contacts, alarm, notes, color recognition, voice recorder, calendar, settings and favorites. Even users inexperienced with touch screens can learn how to control BlindShell after a 30 minute tutorial. A unique, easy-to-use keyboard for writing numbers and texts is seamlessly integrated. For newcomers, it eases the transition to touch phones without having to learn the more complicated interfaces of TalkBack or VoiceOver. It is capable of running on low cost hardware, making it possible to have an accessible touch screen smart phone for about $100.

The LightHouse believes this may be a good solution for those new to smartphones, and the simplified interface may be easier to learn for older students. BlindShell is looking for beginner level Android users to provide feedback on the user friendliness of this new application. Volunteers that already own phones will be able to access the app for free and get to keep it and all future generations at no cost. You will be asked to fill out a questionnaire about your experience after at least 3 weeks.

If you have an Android phone and would like to be part of the LightHouse trial group, please contact LightHouse Deputy Director Scott Blanks at 415-694-7371 or sblanks@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Now Enrolling Students: Your First Shot to Learn Effective Blindness Skills This Year

Changing Vision Changing Life, Immersion Training at Enchanted Hills

Next session begins January 11 – sign up now by contacting Debbie Bacon at 415-694-7357 or dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Since June 2013, the LightHouse has hosted our 6-day Changing Vision Changing Life Immersion training program at Enchanted Hills Retreat located in the clear air and beauty of Napa’s Mt. Veeder. Each session brings together up to 25 adult students from all over Northern California and the Central Valley. They range in age from mid-20’s to 90 and are either new to low vision or blindness, or have had a significant change in vision and have requested additional training. While gaining skills and confidence with changing vision is the overall theme of the week, the experience of coming together with other adults who are blind or have low vision to learn or relearn skills that bring them back to the kind of life they desire, remains the pivotal impact of the week-long experience.

How do you flip an egg if you can’t see it? How do you keep colored socks together? What’s a secret way to tell the difference between shampoo and conditioner? During our week of immersion, students find new ways to accomplish familiar life activities with like-minded peers – an experience which is supportive, motivational and enjoyable. Students are introduced to skills, strategies and tools that can transfer from home to school to work, from sun-up to sundown, from cooking to home repair. And for many students, this is the first time they have had the chance to meet others and learn from low vision, blind instructors and mentors. While it is an active week, time out is provided for students to relax and share their personal experiences with each other, gaining insight, perspective and support for moving forward.

This week with the LightHouse is life-changing, but the follow-up work we do is just as important. We know our students want more focus “after” the training so we provide Telephone Conferencing so the group can keep in touch and support each other. Plus we contact each student one week after training to see what they are up to, if they are using their skills and how they are applying them. Each student creates their own “Next Steps Check List”, a sort of road map focused on their education, training, social interaction, community engagement and recreational involvement. This Check List provides the focus that students require, allowing each the opportunity to further develop skills after leaving their week of training.

Some of the specific areas that are introduced throughout the week include:
Reading print materials – from magnification to scanning and listening
Enhancing useable vision; understanding how lighting, contrast and magnification can help organization and labeling
Taking Notes
Financial Management
Time and Calendaring
Successfully accomplishing day-to-day tasks
Basic cooking skills
Traveling and moving safely and confidently in home and in the community
Accessible computer and other low-tech equipment
Training your family and friends – “helping” through understanding
Introduction to Braille
Community, state and federal resources
Personal advocacy
Leisure and recreation

There is a fee to attend the Changing Vision Changing Life Immersion week, however, if you are eligible for the training and living in the counties of San Francisco, Marin, Alameda, Humboldt or Del Norte, this Immersion Retreat is at no charge.

Dates of Next Session: January 11-16, 2015
For more information please contact: Debbie Bacon at 415-694-7357 or dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Students practice yoga at LightHouse Immersion in Napa

LightHouse Youth Visit Hiller Aviation Museum

LightHouse Youth Visit Hiller Aviation Museum

In late November, a group of LightHouse youth visited the Hiller Aviation Museum in San Carlos, California for a hands-on tour of flight and aviation.

LightHouse yout at Hiller Aviation

The tour was led by two spectacular Hiller Aviation docents who shared their love of flight through fascinating personal stories and provided helpful, hands-on explanations of exhibits.

LightHouse Youth at Hiller Aviation.

Visitors had the chance to touch the first plane to land on an aircraft carrier, practice flying a simulation helicopter, have an individual tour of a Cessna airplane and much more.

LightHouse youth Hiller Aviation

LightHouse Youth at Hiller Aviation

A big thank you to Hiller Aviation for having us!

Missed this year’s Superfest or want to watch a film again?

SFGOVTV channel 78 will be playing some films from this year’s festival. Even more exciting – all of the films will screen with captioning and audio description.

Visit sfgovtv.org for information on how to watch them over the web.

For people outside of SF, you can stream them live: http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?publish_id=47

Here is the schedule through mid-January:

Saturdays

9AM Vectors of Autism
9:40AM Once Again
10AM The Interviewer
10:15AM Everything is Incredible
10:30AM Restraint and Seclusion
3PM Juggle and Cut
3:15PM The Interviewer
6PM Vectors of Autism
6:40PM Once Again
10PM Restraint and Seclusion
10:30PM Everything is Incredible
10:40PM Juggle and Cut

 Sundays

9AM Juggle and Cut
9:15 AM Restraint and Seclusion
9:40AM Once Again
10AM The Interview
10:15 AM Vectors of Autism
10:50 AM Everything is Incredible
7PM The Interview
7:15PM Juggle and Cut
8PM Everything is Incredible
8:10PM Once Again
8:30PM Restraint and Seclusion
10 PM Vectors of Autism

 

 

 

LightHouse Marin Has a New Address as of December 15

“Go back?” he thought. “No good at all! Go sideways? Impossible! Go forward? Only thing to do! On we go!” So up he got, and trotted along with his little sword held in front of him and one hand feeling the wall, and his heart all of a patter and a pitter.”

― J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit

Instead of moving forward with a sword however, the LightHouse is putting its best cane forward and making a move. We’re excited to announce that as of Monday, December 15th, our satellite office LightHouse Marin will be moving to 851 Irwin Street, Suite 206, in San Rafael, only three blocks from our current home, the Whistlestop Active Aging Center. We will still be very accessible from the Marin Transit Hub (east, across Heatherton at 3rd Street). LightHouse visitors and students can sign up with Whistlestop Wheels transportation services to take them from their homes right to our door and there is one hour visitor parking for those driving in.

Our new address: 851 Irwin Street, Suite 206, San Rafael, CA 94901-3343. See below for walking/driving directions.

Our office is expanding and will include space to facilitate our classes and support groups. While we set up our new home, we’ll see students by appointment during December and then be open to the public on January 5, 2015. Our phone number (415-258-8496) and fax (415-258-8501) remain the same. We are also thrilled that our collaboration with Vision Impaired of Marin, who facilitates support groups and social opportunities with other blind and low vision adults, will continue as they make the move with us.

Growth is good for everyone and we congratulate Whistlestop Active Aging Center, our home for the past five years, as they expand into our old space and grow their transportation program, a service our students heartily benefit from. We thank Executive Director of Whistlestop Joe O’Heir and his staff for five years of ‘living together’ and we look forward to future collaboration as close neighbors.

When we first moved to Whistlestop one of our goals was to ensure that our students would develop the skills and confidence to easily participate in classes at Whistlestop, and we’ll continue to do so. The Whistlestop Café is easy walking distance from our new address as are the Whistlestop classes, so LightHouse students can continue to benefit from both agencies: great training and support from the LightHouse and continued participation in the community with Whistlestop.

Come visit LightHouse of Marin in our new space beginning Monday, January 5th – LightHouse Social Worker Jeff Carlson looks forward to greeting you.

By the way, we are looking for a Class B driver to drive our 14-passenger shuttle bus, which we will keep at the Marin office, to special events in and around the Bay Area. If you or someone you know might be interested in this paid position, see our job description or contact Tony Fletcher at 415-694-7319 or afletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

DIRECTIONS TO LIGHTHOUSE MARIN

Again the new address is 851 Irwin Street, Suite 206, San Rafael, CA  94901

Walking Directions/Parking Lot
The new office is one block east of the San Rafael Transit Center, between 2nd and 3rd Streets and between Irwin and Hetherton Streets.

Walking, from the San Rafael Transit Center:
Cross Hetherton at 3rd Street (Hetherton is one-way, heading south)
For Main Entrance, continue one block to Irwin.
Turn right onto Irwin.
Entrance is midblock, on the right, up a few steps.

For Parking Lot (Accessible) Entrance:
Cross Hetherton at 3rd Street (Hetherton is one-way, heading south).
Continue ½ block.
Turn right after the driveway.
Entrance is on the left (no steps), midblock.

Driving Directions
The building is located one block east of the San Rafael Transit Center, between 2nd and 3rd Streets.

Directions from North 101
Take the Central San Rafael exit.
Continue onto Hetherton.
Turn left on 2nd Street.
Turn left on Irwin Street.
Turn left on 3rd Street; halfway down block, turn left into the parking lot.

Directions from South 101
Take the Central San Rafael exit.
Continue onto Irwin Street.
Turn left on 3rd Street; halfway down block, turn left into the parking lot.

Jeff Carlson sits at his new desk

new Marin office building

Find Your Musical Self – LightHouse Youth Music 101

“If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music.”
― Albert Einstein

Join LightHouse youth as we explore the world of music. Participants will have the opportunity to listen to, learn about and create their own musical expressions amongst a range of musical genres and instruments.

An experienced musician will provide a monthly intensive and fun study focusing on a theme or instrument. Youth will have the opportunity to demo their own skills, and try the new genera or instrument. At the end of each lesson there’ll be a jam session using simple household items re-envisioned to demonstrate musical themes and instrumentations.

2015 Winter and Spring Music 101 Schedule:
January 10: Dammed Drumming (Drums)
February 14: Getty for Guitars (String Instruments)
March 14: Wind Winders (Wind Instruments)
April 11: Keyboard Craziness (Piano and Keyboards)
May 9: Dangerous DJ (Electronic sound)

Who: Blind and Low Vision Youth, ages 8 to 18
What: Music Appreciation 101
When: 2:00 to 4:00 p.m., second Saturday of the month
Where: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
Waiver: Each participant must submit a LightHouse Youth Program waiver if they have not done so for a previous outing or event.
Cost: FREE for low vision and blind youth

Classes will be limited to 8 participants, and all participants must RSVP.

For more information and to RSVP, contact Jamey Gump, Youth Services Coordinator, at (415) 694-7372, or jgump@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Staff Profile – Debbie Bacon Offers Her Students Choices

One of a series of LightHouse staff profiles.

“When students come to me they are often in the middle of big life changes because their vision is changing,” says LightHouse Rehabilitation Counselor Debbie Bacon. “People often don’t know where to turn, or if they do, they don’t know what questions to ask. They feel they are stuck, without any tools to navigate their new world.”
Debbie Bacon

Debbie is one of the first people a person new to blindness or low vision speaks to when they first contact the LightHouse. Her job, a job she performs with poise and immense care, begins by interviewing and encouraging. She gets students in the door, helping them assess their goals and needs, and then begins to assist them in meeting their aspirations. She emphasizes that changes in vision can be the beginning of a rich, exciting new journey, and she helps them learn to navigate with grace, dignity and humor. “If the brain were a box,” she says, “then I ‘lift the lid’ on our blind students’ boxes, giving them a glimpse of what their world can be like. Then I encourage them to step outside those boxes and participate wholly.”

Debbie grew up in Colusa, California, in the northern part of the valley – a small farming community of roughly 5000 people. “I was the only person with low vision in my family, school, and community.” Debbie, a trailblazer at heart, didn’t let her vision slow her down in a town unfamiliar with blindness. She developed strong interests in the performing arts, including music, film and theater, as well as a passion for reading. “People in my town learned along with me that blindness is not an excuse for passivity and idleness, that I am a fully capable person with as much potential as anyone else around me.”

She mentions that she is also a fan of the TV show Star Trek and tells us, “I can’t help but notice that some of the ingenious, unimaginable items from Star Trek of the 1960s are now here in real life. Devices like the iPhone and Google Glass, items I believe were first imagined in Star Trek and other sci-fi worlds, are now everyday articles that enrich our lives. For the blind, these devices help us live a more full and rewarding life. Not only can we communicate with anyone, anywhere, anytime with our cell phones, but we can also use our phones to dictate notes, read webpages, and navigate the interior of a complicated airport [a reference to LightHouse’s work with the technology company, Indoo.rs, and their app which audibly helps the blind navigate places such as San Francisco International Airport]. These devices are tools for employment, education and personal independence.”

Debbie has a Master’s Degree in Rehabilitation Counseling. “I am a blind parent of three children who grew up with Special Education Services, with IEPs (Individuals Educational Plan, used by schools to tailor learning to the student with special needs) because of learning disabilities. My teaching degree, special education experience, my blindness, and my children’s learning disabilities all make me uniquely prepared to understand and help parents meet their children’s need and be their champions and advocates.” When she works with families she makes it clear that parents should feel comfortable asking her questions about their children’s educational needs.

A favorite part of Debbie’s work at the LightHouse is teaching blindness skills at our Changing Vision Changing Life sessions, where students come together for weeklong intensive training. “Teaching blindness skills is critical,” she says, “and the core of the Program; but the real power of this week-long immersion is what happens at breakfast, during yoga, and while we hike over bridges and down unpaved paths. It is during these times that our students really begin to see the possibilities in front of them.” Graduates of the Changing Vision program not only leave with skills and the courage to live independently, they also have a lasting support network from which they continue to draw strength.

She says, “The most difficult part of my job is hearing students tell me how they have abandoned their old lives, quitting jobs or school and giving up dreams. On the flipside, the most powerful, rewarding aspect of my job is helping people get back on track.” Contact Debbie at 415-694-7357 or dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

LightHouse Builds First UC Berkeley Campus Talking Tactile Map

Visitors and students unfamiliar with the campus at UC Berkeley may experience a bit of difficulty finding their way around the sprawling campus. But by getting their hands on a map and taking time to study it, they can learn the positions of buildings relative to each other, and determine how to get from one place to another. This way they build a “mental map” of the campus.

But for a student or visitor who is blind or has low vision, building that mental map, finding new classrooms each semester on a campus like UC Berkeley – with its non-linear paths of travel, and buildings with multiple entrances – can be daunting. Soon blind and low vision students and visitors to the UC Berkeley campus will be able to use special tactile maps of the campus that “talk”, thanks to the LightHouse.

“If you examine a map tactilely, it really becomes ingrained. It’s as though you’ve walked through the space.” –LightHouse CEO, Bryan Bashin

LightHouse Access to Information Services specializes in conveying “visual” information tactilely, producing braille maps of outdoor and indoor public spaces; college, hospital and corporate campuses; and transit systems. With UC Berkeley we’re taking it one step further, making maps of the campus that are not only tactile, but also large-print, and with an audio component accessible through a Livescribe Smartpen.

When a user taps a feature on a map with a Livescribe Smartpen (basically a slim computer with a tiny camera that can read the underlying micro-dot pattern) a richly detailed audio commentary on each location, including nearby landscape features and assets, pours into the user’s ear. The multiple ways this information is presented help students and visitors tailor their study of the maps to their own individual needs and skill levels; for example, breaking the material into chunks for better retention or working from simple to complex.

UC Berkeley will be making these maps available through their Disabled Students Program in the near future. The LightHouse is also engaged in similar projects including the Stanford campus and San Francisco State, as well as for BART and SF Muni Metro. Contact us about creating a map for your transit system, campus, or building today.

To learn more, visit our braille and tactile maps web page, or contact Greg Kehret to discuss how the LightHouse can help you provide meaningful access to your site. He can be reached at 415-694-7349 or gkehret@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Enchanted Hills Retreat – Our Improved Connectivity Will Make Your Gathering Connected for Success

Our new roof-mounted antenna with sufficient height for a clear line of sight, brings in a strong internet signal to our visitors at Enchanted Hills Retreat

At Enchanted Hills Retreat, our rustic camp located on beautiful Mt. Veeder in Napa, we are constantly making improvements to make your stay more comfortable and productive. Most recently we completed the installation of a new roof-mounted antenna with clear line of sight. This means no obstacles, such as hills or homes, are in the way of our higher-speed internet capability.

Our clever IT Department, headed by Brian Hardy, worked with contractors to find a 19-mile microwave path in the mountains to make this accomplishment possible. The new service operates at ten megabits per second so that though the Retreat is located in the rural hills of Napa, our internet speed compares well with that found in urban areas. Complimenting this new bandwidth is a wireless architecture that distributes the bandwidth to numerous buildings and locations around the property, literally bringing “wireless to the woods.”

In 2014 both blind and sighted visitors find ever-increasing use for personal technology. Our increased bandwidth adds another layer of services for access and communications and makes our affordable wine country retreat that much more of a desirable place to hold your family reunion, yoga workshop, wedding, spiritual retreat, company off-site meeting or seminar.

Enchanted Hills Retreat, which can be rented nearly year-round, boasts a small lake, several rushing creeks, miles of nature trails for hiking, a heated outdoor swimming pool and a variety of breakout rooms for groups from 30 to 150. There are flexible service options including tasty, home-style meals and more.

For information and reservations, contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7310. Read more about Enchanted Hills Retreat.

Beautiful Lokoya lake appears through the trees at Enchanted Hills Retreat

Last Chance: Are You a Legally Blind Californian? You May Be Eligible for Compensation From Redbox Class Action Suit

The deadline to apply for compensation from the Redbox lawsuit settlement is November 12, 2014. Claims are expected to pay several thousand dollars to each blind Californian who meets the criteria and fills out the application.

After a 3-year effort by LightHouse and Disability Rights Advocates, blind Californians will be able to access Redbox kiosks independently. The settlement means that Redbox will start designing and emplacing accessible versions of its currently-inaccessible DVD vending machines in the next few years. All inaccessible California DVD rental machines will be converted to ones which have a tactile keypad and talk. This is a major accessibility victory.

Please note: you don’t need to have physically attempted to use a Redbox to qualify for the settlement. If you simply would have liked to use it but have heard that blind people can’t use it because it is inaccessible, this qualifies. There is no age limit – you can apply for the settlement even if you are under 18 as long as you meet the qualifications.

Read more about the settlement here.
Make A Claim Now!