On Thu, Feb  4, 2016 at 02:04 pm, Maria Campbell <[email protected]> wrote:
I don't mind hearing sighted jargon as long as it is translated into
    something I can understand on the keyboard.

 This actually brings up an interesting sub-question.  Other than when actually 
instructing on what keystrokes are necessary to accomplish a given action, and 
during practice to master that action, when I also mention the action name 
and/or jargon that goes with it, I do not generally ever mention the keystrokes 
in the future.  I presume that once someone has mastered "select" in the 
context of a file or files or in the context of a word through a text block 
that I not only don't, but shouldn't, be mentioning the keystrokes again.  I 
simply say "select" and the appropriate whatever comes after for the context in 
question.  I presume that the necessary nuts-and-bolts are already understood 
and should be used as the basis for building upon more complex tasks.

Is there any reason to keep reiterating the keystrokes once a given action 
appears to have been mastered rather than just using the action name itself?

Brian

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