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LEVELS EDUCATIONAL PLAYING FIELD FOR BLIND & VISUALLY IMPAIRED
Released on
= February 8, 2005, 9:40 am
Press Release
Author = Data Conversion Laboratory, Inc.
Industry = Computers
Press Release
Summary =
Visually impaired students no longer have to wait six months or
longer for accessible textbooks, thanks to a new XML standard and
Data Conversion Laboratory.
Press Release
Body = NEW YORK - For the blind and visually impaired new technology
has literally opened up the doors to education. They can listen
to a
textbook on a computer or read it using refreshable braille. Yet
students with print disabilities have had to wait six months or
longer for an accessible textbook to be made available to them.
This is set
to change, however, thanks to a reauthorization of the Individuals
with Disabilities Educational Act (IDEA). The act, signed by President
Bush on December 3, is geared to give students with print disabilities
the same access to educational materials as their sighted peers.
Key to the effectiveness
of this act is the requirement of a standard national file format
for the production of textbooks in electronic files. This will make
conversion into accessible formats such as braille, large print
or digital text much faster.
"The new
standard is an historic milestone," says Mark Gross, president
of Data Conversion Laboratory (DCL), a New York-based technology
firm involved in the conversion of textbooks into accessible formats
and a
supporter of the new standard. "Like Eli Whitney's invention
of interchangeable parts which led to the industrial revolution,
an accepted standard will revolutionize preparation of materials
for the blind and visually impaired."
It will also
standardize the tools that make use of these materials, such as
braille readers and computer and display equipment, adds Gross.
The act stipulates
that state education agencies and local schools must use this new
file format. It also encourages them to demand that the publishers
from whom they buy textbooks produce their materials in these files.
Having publishers do this as part of the publication process would
reduce costs for education organizations.
-- Digital Talking
Book
The new national
file format is based on an ANSI NISO standard and the text portions
of it are referred to as Digital Talking Book (DTBook), an XML standard
coordinated by the DAISY Consortium and the Library of Congress'
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
(NLS).
The non-profit
DAISY Consortium is promoting DAISY XML standards throughout the
world and urges publishers to provide materials in the new file
format.
"Publishers
can help libraries serving persons with disabilities by providing
XML files in DTBook or in other XML vocabularies that can be transformed
to this rapidly advancing standard," says George Kerscher,
secretary general for the DAISY Consortium.
Data Conversion
Laboratory will be providing conversion to DTBook, beginning in
February, as part of its "Books2Bytes" service (www.books2bytes.com).
"The new
service will allow authorized organizations to quickly and easily
produce materials without needing to make a capital investment,
and without long term commitments - as they can do this one book
at a
time," says Gross.
-- Central store
Another important
requirement of the act is the establishment of a central repository
for the storage and distribution of the new standardized files.
"A national
file repository would allow publishers, schools and colleges alike
to disseminate files to those who need them" says Gross, "and
it would also reduce duplication of effort."
The inclusion
of this "one-stop-shop" provision was considered critical
by advocates to ensure that teachers spend more time teaching rather
than hunting down accessible materials for their students.
###
FURTHER INFORMATION
- DATA CONVERSION
LABORATORY, INC. (http://www.dclab.com)
Data Conversion Laboratory (DCL) has over 20 years in the conversion
business with over 10,000 projects completed. It wrote the chapter
on legacy data conversion in the "Columbia Guide to Digital
Publishing". And has clients in the DOD (Air Force, Army, Marines,
Navy), aerospace, pharmaceutical, and software industries.
DCL BOOKS2BYTES
SERVICE
http://www.books2bytes.com
CONTACT:
Shavy Schwimmer
Tel: (718) 307-5767
E-mail: sschwimmer@dclab.com.
Mark Gross (President)
Tel: (718) 307-5767
E-mail: markgross@dclab.com
- DAISY CONSORTIUM (http://www.daisy.org/)
The DAISY Consortium was formed in May, 1996 by talking book libraries
to lead the worldwide transition from analog to Digital Talking
Books. DAISY denotes the Digital Accessible Information System.
Web Site = http://www.dclab.com
Contact Details
= 61-18 190th Street,
Fresh Meadows, NY 11365
(718)307-5767
sschwimmer@dclab.com
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