Category Archives: travel

Austin, Texas – Still a Lucky Place to be Blind!

I used to live, study and work O&M in Austin, Texas. When I was there- it was the O&M hey day- 3 Universities provided O&M prep – 1 undergraduate program (Stephen F. Austin O&M Program (in Texas)) and 2 graduate – UT  Austin  (my alma mater-no longer has O&M program) and Texas Tech (Texas Tech O&M Program) trained O&M Specialists. While I found no articles on Orientation and Mobility in the Washington Post this morning- look what  great articles I found in the Austin Statesman.

Up and down escalators with a daughter with special needs

=Monday, April 06, 2009 

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The Lowdown on Low Vision

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DON’T SHUN THE CANE! Cane Use Benefits Older Adults after Small Reduction in Visual Acuity

Dr. Massof’s Lecture – podcast

This link takes you to a fantastic and important lecture given by Dr. Robert Massof about a project that aims to increase the use of the long cane among older adults with visual impairments. He also reveals how Medicare is “blind” to those with low vision in their policy decisions.

Within this lecture Dr. Massof provides important statistics. For example, even a small decrease in visual acuity (VA) triples the rate of injury and death by trauma/accident in older adults.

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Future O and M Device?

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Practical Applications

For the young contestants in this prestigious science fair, winning a patent is almost as important as earning top prize. Here’s a look at some top-scoring medical projects with real-world benefits.

Newsweek Web Exclusive
Jun 14, 2005

Each year, 1,400 high-school students from more than 40 countries are invited to compete in the prestigious Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF), the world’s largest precollege science contest. The select group of young scientists is chosen from the several million students who compete in local and regional science fairs throughout the year. Participants compete for $3 million in scholarships and prizes, presenting projects in 15 categories like medicine, biochemistry, computer science and zoology. Earning top honors isn’t the only goal for contestants. Nineteen percent (or 274) of the finalists at the 2005 competition held last month have already begun the process to patent their projects.

Here’s a look at some of this year’s top projects:

Ameen Abdulrasool, a senior at the Illinois Junior Academy of Science, won top honors at this year’s Intel ISEF for his project, “Prototype for Autonomy: Pathway for the Blind.” He walked away with $70,000 in prize money and a free trip to October’s Nobel Prize ceremony. Abdulrasool developed technology that allows visually impaired individuals to navigate themselves from one location to another by using the Global Positioning System (much like General Motors’ OnStar system). Individuals wear a one-pound Walkman-size device, a bracelet on each arm and a pair of earphones. After entering a starting and ending location into a personal digital assistant (PDA), they are guided with verbal commands that tell them when and in what direction to turn. Simultaneously, a bracelet vibrates signaling the correct direction. To test his device, Abdulrasool recruited 36 blind adults and asked them to visit five landmarks in his neighborhood. The navigational tool saved people an average of 26 minutes in travel time and reduced the number of errors (wrong turns and missed locations). “Looking at how hard it was for them to travel and how they were dependent on everyone else motivated me to do something,” he says. Abdulrasool hopes is applying for a patent and then plans to market the product commercially.

Bad Orientation and Mobility skills video!

Grace Ambrose-Zaken Very bad cane technique is shown in this video.

this is a video showing people how to use a cane of those people who are visually impaired or blind, this is to show the fully sighted a more in depth view to what it is we learn to do with our canes.

 

Yesterday at 9:57pm via YouTube · Comment ·

GIVING MOBILITY TO THE BLIND

Published 9/15/1986

After a gunshot wound took his sight he obtained O&M instruction and learned to travel independently again.  

http://www.nytimes.com/1986/09/15/style/giving-mobility-to-the-blind.html?scp=1&sq=orientation%20and%20mobility&st=cse

Love this Dog Guide using, Senior Adult Couple!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVnTrx7kh9s&feature=related

This is great advertising for how seniors love gaining these essential skills! But you definitely need a qualified O&M Specialist to get these results!!

Lack of licensure of Orientation and Mobility means Lack of Access to Orientation and Mobility

I came across a very frustrating post yesterday about one person’s struggle with obtaining a cane and orientation and mobility instruction. A senior, not old enough for one program and not visually impaired for another – but  feeling the effects of the vision impairment.

http://asyourworldchanges.wordpress.com/2009/08/19/disabled-sorry-no-insurance-for-you/#comment-503

While some of the post grows weary with the “whine” factor – it is strong in pointing out the grievous discrimination against people with low vision in our country.

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My focus

The purpose of this blog is to highlight what is mostly unknown in the general population – my profession: Orientation and Mobility. I administer distance learning programs at Hunter College that prepare teachers of learners who are blind or visually impaired in vision rehabilitation therapy and orientation and mobility. Hunter’s graduates work in schools and vision rehabilitation agencies teaching travel skills and daily living skills needed by children and adults who are congenitally or adventitiously visually impaired.

Two things you should know – if you are looking for a new career – there are many, many jobs available in every state in the US and country of the world in vision rehabilitation therapy and orientation and mobility. The second thing you should know is that, like Hunter College, most university programs in the US have obtained federal grants that pay students to learn these professions.

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