Archive for the “careers/jobs for people who are blind” Category

Questions from the kids: our first school presentation of 2016

January 13, 201622 CommentsPosted in blindness, Braille, careers/jobs for people who are blind, questions kids ask, Seeing Eye dogs, technology for people who are blind, Uncategorized, visiting schools

My Seeing Eye dog Whitney and I started our new year of elementary school visits in a big way: we took a commuter train to Elmhurst (The Chicago suburb where I grew up) and gave a presentation to 250 kindergartners, first-graders, and second-graders. All. At. Once. Whitney usually leads me to the train station in […]

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Guest post: Falling in love with Itzhak Perlman

January 9, 201620 CommentsPosted in careers/jobs for people who are blind, guest blog, memoir writing, Uncategorized

Our regular blog readers will remember the You read that out loud in class?” guest post Regan Burke wrote for us about the value of honesty in memoir-writing. Regan is a civil rights activist,and she’s enrolled in the memoir-writing class I lead at Grace Place in Chicago. When I discovered she’d been at that same […]

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Sometimes the past is too painful to write about

November 24, 201513 CommentsPosted in Blogroll, careers/jobs for people who are blind, memoir writing, Uncategorized

In honor of the 30th anniversary of the movie Back to the Future, I asked the writers in my memoir classes last week to think about their own family histories. “Write about where you’d like to travel back — or forward — to,” I told them. “And then, explain why.” Many, many writers wanted to […]

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Time out for Seeing Eye dogs

November 21, 201513 CommentsPosted in blindness, careers/jobs for people who are blind, Seeing Eye dogs, technology for people who are blind, Uncategorized, visiting schools, writing, Writing for Children

Realizing I wouldn’t be able to see when his schoolfriends raised their hands to ask questions, my six-year-old great nephew Ray volunteered to help me call on kids in all three of the first-grade classes we visited at his school yesterday. All of the first-graders at Westmore Elementary had read Hanni and Beth: Safe & […]

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