Louis braille biography in gujarati recipes
•
Hardik A. Vyas
Asst. Professor
Babu Madhav Institute of Information Technology, UkaTarsadia University, Maliba Campus, Gopal Vidyanagar, Bardoli-Mahuva Road,
Paresh V. Virparia
The paper describes the basics of Braille script and Gujarati Language. It also describes that the moderate amount of work is found in Braille character recognition in various languages like Bengali, English, Hindi, Arabic etc. but transliteration of Braille to Gujarati is un-touched. So the researcher felt that there is a need for the transliteration of Braille to Gujarati text. The paper proposed the transliteration model that will transliterates inputted Braille cell into the Gujarati language characters. It will act as an aid to visually impaired people of the society.
Gordan, E Legge, Cindee, M Madison, and Stephen, J Mansfield, "Measuring Braille reading speed with the MNREAD test," Visual Impairment Research, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. , July
Braille- The online encyclopedia. [Online]. Brai
•
Blindness and education
Education of students with vision impairment
The subject of blindness and education has included evolving approaches and public perceptions of how best to address the special needs of blind students. The practice of institutionalizing the blind in asylums has a history extending back over a thousand years, but it was not until the 18th century that authorities created schools for them where blind children, particularly those more privileged, were usually educated in such specialized settings. These institutions provided simple vocational and adaptive training, as well as grounding in academic subjects offered through alternative formats. Literature, for example, was being made available to blind students by way of embossed Roman letters.
Ancient Egypt
[edit]The Ancient Egyptians were the first civilisation to display an interest in the causes and cures for disabilities and during some periods blind people are recorded as representing a substantia
•
Louis Braille
French educator and inventor of the Braille system (–)
Louis Braille | |
---|---|
Born | ()4 January Coupvray, French Empire |
Died | 6 January () (aged43) Paris, French Republic |
Resting place | |
Occupations | |
Knownfor | Braille |
Louis Braille (brayl; French:[lwibʁɑj]; 4 January – 6 January ) was a French educator and the inventor of a reading and writing system named after him, braille, intended for use by visually impaired people. His system is used worldwide and remains virtually unchanged to this day.
Braille was blinded in one eye at the age of three. This occurred as a result from an accident with a stitching awl in his father's harness making shop. Consequently, an infection set in and spread to both eyes, resulting in total blindness.[1] At that time, there were not many resources in place for the blind, but he nevertheless excelled in his education and received a scholarship to France's Royal Institute for Blind Youth