Tag Archive

Education

Are You a Vision Instructor or Other Blindness Professional? Come to Provider’s Weekend at Enchanted Hills This May

Free to first timers!

For over 20 years the LightHouse has hosted Provider’s Weekend, our signature event where teachers, managers, program staff and students entering the blindness field can meet and network throughout a long weekend.

Be sure to reserve May 20 to 22 now for an enlarged and far-ranging Provider’s Weekend at Enchanted Hills Retreat in Napa.

When: May 20–22, 2016
Where: Enchanted Hills Retreat
Cost: $100.00 (free for first-time participants)

May is the perfect month to swim in our heated pool, meet others in the warm evening around the campfire, and wrestle with bigger questions that take a bit more time than available around the office water cooler. You’ll meet service providers working in the field of blindness from all over northern California, in workshops and presentations. You’ll exchange practical ideas and build a network you might not otherwise have. You might even find your next job.

Stay in a lakeside cabin, the lodge or one of our fully accessible cabins next to the dining hall. The cost for the weekend, including all meals, is $100.00. In addition to discussing philosophies, trends and issues we face in providing services for people with visual impairments, you can enjoy boating on Lake Lakoya, trails for hiking and savory meals provided by a wonderful kitchen staff. You’ll learn from your peers, relax in a natural setting with many educational and recreational opportunities. And it’s not unheard of to find a drop or two of Napa wine from the neighborhood, too.

Special Incentive for First Time Attendees!
As a special incentive for first-time attendees of Provider’s Weekend – have the weekend on us. The free retreat is the least we can do to honor those who are helping shape the blindness field across northern California.

So mark your calendars now and reserve space before it’s gone. We expect with the flood of new faces we’ll fill all available cabins well before May.

For information and reservations contact Tony Fletcher at 415-694-7319 or tfletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Feb 18 Registration Deadline Looms for Braille Challenge

When: February 27, 2016
Where: The California School for the Blind
Deadline to register is February 18, 2016

Registration is well under way for the Northern California Braille Challenge which will be held and hosted by the California School for the Blind, in collaboration of LightHouse for the Blind, Vista Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Junior Blind-Northern California and Lions Center for the Blind.

The day will include speakers who are past Braille Challenge national winners, workshops for parents and teachers and a wonderful day of braille focused events.

Parents and teachers need to complete the 2016 Permission form and return it by February 18, 2016 to CSB, Attn: Sharon Sacks, 500 Walnut Ave., Fremont, CA 94536.

If you have questions feel free to contact Alice McGrath, Community Relations Manager at amcgrath@vistacenter.org or call 650 858-0202, ext. 130.

LightHouse YES: Youth Employment Series – January through May 2016

On Saturday January 30, the LightHouse Youth Program launches its latest program for low vision and blind transition aged students. LightHouse YES is a series of day long workshops designed to help low vision or blind transition-aged students to be prepared to become successfully employed.

This informative new series will provide low vision and blind transition-aged youth with vital skills and practices that will help them become more successful in higher education and their chosen career path.

First Workshop: Exploring Career Paths
Saturday, January 30, 9:00 a.m to 4:00 p.m.
LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters

Our first segment of our new LightHouse Youth Employment Series will consist of an in-depth discussion about career exploration.  Students will learn about all sorts of careers from successful low vision and blind individuals in a wide variety of fields. At the end of this workshop, students will have learned techniques and methods they can use to research career paths so that they can attempt to find the best job suited to them.

Save the Date for the February workshop: Saturday, February 20
During the next LightHouse Youth Employment Series workshop, students will learn how to appropriately assess their skills and needs in order to get the most appropriate accommodations for school, work and beyond.  A more in-depth description of February’s workshop will be available shortly.

If you would like more information or to register for the workshop please contact Jamey Gump, Youth Services Coordinator, at 415-694-7372 or by email at jgump@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Youth Employment Series of Workshops
Through a variety of speakers and collaborative activities led by successful blind or low vision professionals, students will gain invaluable wisdom that can help them grow and shape themselves into competent blind adults.

Held at LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. on the following Saturdays:

January 30
February 20
March 26
April 30
May 21

The workshops will teach students to:

  • Effectively navigate through any system to ensure you receive necessary accommodations.
  • Learn about accommodations available to college students and those entering the workforce.
  • Acquire access technology skills which can be applied to real world situations, and test how effective these technologies might be for yourself.
  • Acquire and use blindness skills that will enrich your life and help you achieve your goals, be more confident and learn how to advocate for your needs.
  • How to smoothly transition into college from high school or from college to a career.
  • Develop Effective cover letters and resumes.
  • Practice networking, participate in mock interviews, and understand how to make a strong and positive first impression.
  • Learn how to develop, enhance and utilize your network and your relationship with peers and mentors.
  • And learn much more.

Who is eligible?
Low Vision and Blind youth and transition-aged students

Is there a cost?
The cost to attend one of the LightHouse Youth Employment Series workshops is $150 per student. In addition to the day’s activities and curriculum, students will receive a light breakfast, lunch and refreshments throughout the day. DOR authorizations or alternate payment source must be secured before students will be eligible to participate.

 

 

 

Are You a Musician that is Blind or With Low Vision? Fine-tune Your Craft at Music Academy

Music Academy students Travis Nichols (left) plays electric guitar and Ben Blatchford on keyboards.Do you sing or play an instrument? Train with some of our nation’s best teachers at our summer Music Academy at Enchanted Hills Camp.

“I had a lot of fun this year meeting new people and my experience at EHC was camp was great. Really awesome to meet all of you and to rock out and jam with all of you guys. Everyone who came this year must come next year. We need to get more people in our jam sessions. We killed it up there on stage, we absolutely killed it! EHC is the place to be!”
-Participant Ben Blatchford

The LightHouse will partner for a third year with Dancing Dots, the world’s leading provider of accessible music technology for the blind, to bring our summertime Music Academy back to the redwoods. The Academy is open to young, motivated musicians who are blind or low vision who are 16 to 24 years old.

Music Academy is open to young musicians from all over the world.

New This Year – Music Academy has Expanded to a 10-Day Session
Feedback for our first two sessions has been overwhelmingly positive and our students want more. So we’ve expanded the session from seven to ten days.

The first seven days of the session will take place at Enchanted Hills Camp and include two opportunities to perform for Napa residents. Then students will be transported to the new LightHouse Building at 1155 Market Street for continued training plus the chance to see professional musical performances in various genres such as jazz, classical and rock. Students will meet local musicians and mentors while enjoying the vibrant music scene found in San Francisco. They’ll also train on our multi-media, state-of-the-art technology. All students will get the chance to perform at a showcase concert in the LightHouse Building on Tuesday, August 9.

Lead instructor Bill McCann and student Jenna Baylis work with adaptive software for composition during Blind Music Academy.

Where: Enchanted Hills Camp, Napa and the LightHouse Building, San Francisco
When: August 1 through August 10, 2016

Cost for the week, all-inclusive: $300
(If the registration fee is a barrier, let us know; some scholarships will be available.)

Bill McCann, President and Founder of Dancing Dots, will spend the entire session with the aspiring musicians. McCann, blind himself, will lead a team of four blind instructors and technicians to teach the latest and greatest techniques for blind and low vision students.

“It’s rather bittersweet to be back home after an amazing week of Music Academy at EHC. Met so many awesome people and had an overall great experience. Definitely going back next summer. Yesterday’s concert went very well and everyone performed really good and were at the top of they’re game. Shout out to the kitchen crew as well for delivering great meals throughout camp. Bummed that it all ended so quickly, but stoked to see everyone again next year.”
-Participant Daniel Cavazos

To sign up for Music Academy, contact Taccarra Burrell at 451-694-7310 or ehc@old.lighthouse-sf.org or go to the Enchanted Hills page on our website.

LightHouse Staff Profile: Naomi Rosenberg – Making the Visual Tactile

Naomi Rosenberg stands holding a 3D printed cross-section of a worm and a set of symbols used in 3D printed mapsThe following is one in a monthly series featuring the extraordinary people who make up the LightHouse staff.

Naomi Rosenberg, one of LightHouse’s Accessible Media Specialists, is uniquely equipped to masterfully create materials that are accessible to users who are blind or low vision. She told us, “I love learning languages and I have a degree in Architecture, so the combination of learning braille and using Universal Design (constructing products and spaces so that they can be used by the widest range of people possible) principles is very exciting. I love the challenge of creating tactile maps and 3D models to represent concepts we often only consider visually.” In addition to studying architecture, Naomi earned her undergraduate degree in art, with a focus on sculpture and printmaking, two skills she incorporates into her process.

“Printmaking is about creating physical (tactile) images to produce flat images,” she said. “At LightHouse, I do the reverse of this by taking flat images and translating them into tactile representations.” Naomi also explains how her background in sculpture has honed her skills in making 3D models. “Whether designing a building or creating a sculpture, you have to imagine the way something will look in 3D, which often means making decisions about scale and orientation that conflict with reality.” For example, the famous statue of David is known for having an abnormally large hand. Michelangelo may have intentionally created a large hand to draw attention to an element he wanted the viewer to immediately notice, the hand that slung the stones that took down a giant. “When I create 3D models,” she continues, “I have to consider what’s important to the user. An example of this is a 3D-printed model of a cross-section of a worm for use by blind high school biology students. In designing the model, I had to balance tactile legibility with the inclination to maintain scientific accuracy. We often adjust scale in maps and floor plans as well, keeping in mind which elements are most important to the reading of the object.”

It’s always interesting to learn how our employees discovered the LightHouse. Naomi told us, “At UC Berkeley, where I earned my Master’s in Architecture, [LightHouse Board President] Chris Downey gave a lecture on Universal Design and ADA construction. The following year, he taught a semester-long course on the same topic, which I was lucky to be able to take. While I had a background working with people in the disability community, Chris gave me a framework for design practice, especially focusing on the needs of blind and visually impaired users. When I found myself looking for a job after a cross-country move, I reached out to Chris, asking him if he knew of any opportunities in accessibility. He suggested LightHouse.”

In addition to being a skilled designer, Naomi has a knack for learning languages, especially alphabets. “I learned Hebrew as a child and learned Georgian during a one year high school exchange. I also learned Russian, French, and German.” Shortly after starting at the LightHouse, Naomi taught herself braille, adding one more alphabet to her list.

Regarding the LightHouse’s springtime move to our new expanded headquarters on Market Street, Naomi notes, “It’s an exciting time to be at the LightHouse, as the agency grows and as my department expands services to include 3D printing.” Naomi is an integral part of the team because she incorporates her language, artistic and architectural skills to develop internal standards for our 3D designs, and to further our tactile maps. “My team is incredibly skilled, with BJ [Epstein] who also has her Master’s in Architecture, and Julie [Sadlier], who is a geographer. It’s awesome working with people who are creative, and who are eager to make beautiful, cutting edge accessible materials.”

Naomi and her partner live in Berkeley, in a cabin attached to her childhood home. She remains close to her parents and sister, who instilled in her a desire to think critically and consider the needs of others. “My mother is an artist, massage therapist, and former social worker. My father recently retired from a 30-year stint in agricultural labor management at UC Berkeley. Together, they taught me the importance of creatively looking for solutions to endemic problems, which is relevant to Universal Design and making accessible materials.”

“When I’m at home, I love drawing and building.” LightHouse employees enjoy seeing the awesome repurposed materials that Naomi turns into wearable art, like earrings she made from cardboard instead of beautiful Japanese Akoya Earrings. “I’m also a passionate cyclist. I especially love cruising down Highway 1; a truly beautiful route along the coast.”

If you’re interested in ordering accessible materials, like braille, tactile maps, or 3D designs, contact Access to Information Services at 415.694.7349or MADLab@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

In Honor of Louis Braille – Adaptations Store is Ringing in the New Year with a Special Sale on All Things Braille

Portrait of Louis BrailleOver the last several decades braille educators have been updating the braille code to make it more consistent and user friendly. Beginning January 4, Unified English Braille (UEB), will become the official braille reading and writing system for the United States. Why January 4? Louis Braille, the 19th century French educator and inventor of the braille system of reading and writing, was born on January 4 and to commemorate his creation, the United States will launch the official UEB start date on his birthday.

Adaptations is honoring Louis Braille’s birthday by offering a 10% discount on all braille products and accessories for the entire month of January. That includes slates, styli, dymo tape labelers, pocket braille money keychains, and more. Stock up on these essential supplies for the discerning braillist now. And while you are shopping for your braille products, don’t forget to purchase our new UEB Contraction booklets for only $5.

Read more about the booklets.

Adaptations is located at 214 Van Ness in San Francisco, open Monday through Friday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Call us at (415) 694-7301 or email us at adaptations@old.lighthouse-sf.org with any questions.

A New Year, a New Surge of Classes at the LightHouse

Have you made a New Year’s resolution yet? How about resolving to try something new at the LightHouse this year?

Beginning in 2016, LightHouse is launching an array of new classes. These classes will refresh every quarter so you’ll always want to visit us and try something new. Here’s a sampling of what we have to offer, through the end of March. (To stay updated on the most current happenings, call us on our event line at 415-431-1481 or sign up for Beth’s List by emailing Beth at info@old.lighthouse-sf.org.)

Business of Blindness with Mike Cole
Every Wednesday beginning January 6, from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.
Over a cup of coffee, discuss and debate, converse and philosophize with Mike Cole, former director of the Orientation Center for the Blind, on anything related to blindness. Meet successful blind guest speakers and learn about current happenings in the blindness community.

Movie Club
Every Wednesday beginning January 6 from, 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
Watch an audio-described film and discuss the its high and low points.

Art with Ruthie
Every Monday starting January 11, from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m.
Explore your inner artist with Ruthie and learn new ways to express yourself.

Dental Hygiene Workshop Series
Every Monday starting January 11, from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
UCSF Dental School is hosting a series of workshops on dental hygiene and the affects it has on your overall health.

Yoga with Kimberley
Every second Tuesday of the month beginning January 12, from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m.
Yoga instructor Kimberly—who is legally blind—provides her students with a playful, core-focused vinyasa, designed to promote strength, flexibility and focus. Her creative sequencing encourages students of all levels to try something new.

For information or to sign-up for these classes, contact Molly Irish at mpearson@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7320.

High School Students — Get Ready for Reactions at Chemistry Camp 2016

Students watch a chemistry experiment during Chemistry Camp.Would you like to learn how blind people tackle the visual subject of organic chemistry successfully? Do you have a general love for science? Do you want to learn how you can do chemistry as a blind person just as successfully as your sighted peers? Are you interested in how blind professionals use science in their careers every day? If the answer to any of these is “Yes!” then the 2016 Chemistry Camp is for you.

Join the LightHouse, Accessible Science and Credo High School for an educational, exciting, and fun-filled weekend of hands-on science.

When: Friday, March 18, 2016 through Sunday, March 20, 2016.
Where: Enchanted Hills Camp, 3410 Mt Veeder Rd, Napa, CA 94558
Who: Up to twelve legally blind high school students will be selected to participate. Don’t hesitate to apply if you are in middle school or just out of high school. We do make exceptions.
Cost: There is no cost to apply for the program.
For more information and to apply, visit: http://www.accessiblescience.org/chemistrycamp.

Questions? Email Angela Fowler at angela.fowler@accessiblescience.org.

Funded in part by American Honda Foundation.

Got Talent? Audition by February 1 for the April VIBES Variety Show and Help Raise Money to send Kids to the Enchanted Hills Music Academy

Friend of the LightHouse, Joyce Cid, is organizing another one of her stellar fundraisers to raise money for scholarships to Enchanted Hills. This year all proceeds will go to scholarships for our summer Music Academy. The event will feature talented musicians (and other performers) from around the Bay Area.

Are you a blind musician, comedian or other entertainer? To audition to be part of the show, email Joyce Cid (jcid@sbcglobal.net) a link to a video or audio clip showcasing your talent. Deadline for submissions is February 1.

Tickets to this event will go on sale in the spring. In addition to the entertainment on stage, there will also be tempting food options and alluring silent auction and raffle prizes. Whether you attend as a performer on stage or as an adoring fan of our blind talent, please plan to join us for this special event.

What: V.I.B.E.S. (Visually Impaired and Blind Entertainment Sunday), a fundraiser benefiting Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind, a program of the LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired.
Audition Deadline: Monday, February 1.
When: The show will be on Sunday, April 3, 2016, 1 to 4 pm
Where: Armando’s in Martinez http://www.armandosmartinez.com/

For more information about Music Academy, see this recent article on the program.

 

Sign Up by Tomorrow – LightHouse Youth Program, the Exploratorium and NFB Team up for a Weekend of Science this Spring

Young Tino Benneli and Andre Berardi face off during a Battle-Bot competition, part of the robotics segment of our recent TouchSTEM session at Enchanted Hills.
Note: Deadline to apply for NFB STEM2U is tomorrow, January 5, 2016.

As part of a national grant to make science museums more accessible for the blind, the LightHouse will partner with the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) and the Exploratorium for three days of science for blind school students from around California.

To address the lack of blind youth entering technical careers, the LightHouse believes we need to start early. Earlier than previously thought possible. Parents of blind children in grades 3 to 6 may want to consider this introductory session which features fun activities and great mentorship opportunities.

The free NFB STEM2U program will provide exciting accessible STEM learning opportunities for blind students in grades 3-6. Parents will also have the opportunity to join in the fun and learning.

What: NFB STEM2U San Francisco
When: March 3-5, 2016
Where: Exploratorium, San Francisco

Learn more and apply at www.blindscience.org/nfb-stem2u. If you have questions, please contact Natalie Shaheen at STEM@nfb.org.