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Vision-Aid Appoints Lalit Sudan President and Announces a New Leadership Team for 2021-22
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Lt Col Robert Murgia | Obituary | Andover Townsman
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McM s Miracle Worker matches veteran actors with rising young talent
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What TikTok users who doubt Helen Keller can learn this Oscar season
The more the public interacts with and recognizes individuals with disabilities as the capable people they are, the harder it will be for a trend like that on TikTok to spread.
By Dave PowerUpdated April 19, 2021, 1:51 p.m.
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Steven Prescod as Tereek (left) and Robert Tarango as Artie, in a scene from Feeling Through. Associated Press
The film, as well as the Oscar-nominated documentary âCrip Camp,â beautifully refutes ableist misperceptions that undermine the potential of individuals with disabilities. Those discriminatory beliefs emerged on TikTok last year, when scores of the appâs users ignited a trend denying the long list of achievements Helen Keller accumulated throughout her remarkable life. Their flawed logic concluded that Keller could not have authored books, spoken multiple languages, displayed good handwriting, or graduated from college because she did not have sight
Published April 15, 2021 at 11:33 AM EDT Listen • 49:02
/ A Still from the Video: Adaptive P.E. Games for Blind and Visually Impaired Students by Elina Mullen
According to the Centers for Disease control, more than 4 million Americans aged 40 years and older suffer from uncorrectable vision impairment, and 1 million of those are blind. This number is predicted to more than double by 2050 to nearly 9 million due to the increasing epidemics of diabetes and other chronic diseases and our rapidly aging U.S. population.
In Massachusetts, state sponsored services and supports are only available for those considered “legally” blind, leaving many people with vision impairment without access to services.