New toy helps students with vision disabilities feel the words

Asia-Pacific Sep 4, 2013

AHMEDABAD, INDIA: While braille helps people who are blind read,
educators have been unending tested by the challenge to make their
students visualize the concepts they are learning. A toy that a
postgraduate student of the National Institute of Design (NID),
Ahmedabad, has collaborated in developing may well turn out to be the
“holy braille” of education for people who are blind and low vision,
helping them feel the world around them. The student, Tania Jain, and
a Hyderabad-based ophthalmologist Dr Anthony Vipin Das, have created
‘Fittle’ (Fit the Puzzle) that will enable  children with vision
disabilities learn letters of braille and sense the objects the words
convey.


FITTLE puzzle for the word fish.

Fittle involves breaking down a word into as many blocks as the
letters in the word. For example, FISH is constructed by joining
together four puzzle blocks which have letters F, I, S, H on them,
each imprinted in braille. So when a student with vision disabilities
fits all the letters together, he or she can read the word ‘fish’ as
well as feel the shape of the fish that the blocks will form.

In the first phase of the project, the shapes for 26 different words
are being prepared through 3D designing of the puzzle blocks. The
blocks are obtained through 3D printing. “This method will radically
change the learning process of braille,” said Tania who is working
with her classmate Debanshu Bhaumik on the project. “I have already
undertaken trials at blind schools and the response has been great.”

The first Fittle series is being prepared which will be included in
the curriculum of LV Prasad Eye Institute in Hyderabad. “Of all with
people vision disabilities, only 10 percent know braille,” said Das, a
consultant at LV Prasad Eye Institute. “This tool will help blind kids
at a young age to learn braille and will also give them a good idea of
the world around them.”

With current technology, Fittle can be downloaded through open source
platforms from the website . The letters can be printed by anyone with
a 3D printer. Since the cost of input is high as it involves 3D
printing the team behind Fittle has sought crowd funding through a
website.

Fittle was first presented by Tania at ‘Design Innovation & You’
workshop in the first week of July organized by Camera Culture Group
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s media lab on the BITS
Pilani campus in Hyderabad. The theme of the workshop was ‘Engineering
the Eye’.

Source: The Times of India

http://globalaccessibilitynews.com/2013/09/04/new-toy-helps-students-with-vision-disabilities-feel-the-words/


Best Regards:
Shyam

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