Los Angeles Times

USC hosts Braille bout

Fifty low-vision or blind participan­ts, age 6 to 19, participat­e in a national Braille contest at USC.

- By Meg Bernhard megan.bernhard @latimes.com

Fifty finalists proofread, interpret, transcribe and answer questions in the Braille Challenge.

Fingers whirred, swiftly pressing down keys that would translate spoken words into lines of Braille.

For 45 minutes on Saturday morning, 10 visually impaired high school students tapped furiously on Perkins Braillers — machines similar to typewriter­s that imprint the code on paper — while transcribi­ng passages read aloud. This was the first exam of the daylong Braille Challenge finals, a national competitio­n for low-vision and blind students age 6 to 19, held this year at USC.

Cricket Bidleman of Morro Bay was among the 50 finalists from across the country and Canada to participat­e in the finals. The 18year-old has grown up with the Braille Challenge — she started competing in 2006 when she was 7 and has won the finals four times. This was her last competitio­n, and she has “loved every year I’ve been here.”

“This competitio­n teaches me and other people that it is possible to be successful,” said Bidleman, who will attend Stanford in the fall and hopes to study anthropolo­gy. She said she has made some of her closest friends through the Braille Challenge, and while she’ll miss competing with them, “we’ll still text.”

During the day, students — divided into five age groups — proofread passages, interprete­d charts and graphs, answered questions about selected readings, and transcribe­d other selections as quickly and accurately as possible. The younger age groups also completed a spelling test.

The winner of the oldest age group was Mitchell Bridwell, of Pittsboro, Ind.

To get to Los Angeles, the students first had to qualify in preliminar­y rounds held January through March. In total, students from 22 states and two Canadian provinces competed in the finals Saturday. This year, five California­ns competed in the finals: Bidleman, Dorothy Cho of Anaheim, Miles Lima of Manteca, Darren Ou of Sunnyvale and Sheema Shaikh of Corona.

The Braille Institute, based in Los Angeles, has hosted the competitio­n since its inaugural year in 2000, with the aim of encouragin­g Braille literacy and demystifyi­ng higher education. According to the National Federation of the Blind, only 32% of blind or visually impaired people in the country have a high school diploma or GED, and just 14% hold a bachelor’s degree or higher.

For the first time this year, the competitio­n moved from the Braille Institute’s facility to USC so children and their families could experience a college campus.

Braille Institute President Peter Mindnich said he hoped the competitio­n helps participan­ts feel more independen­t and “imagine the possibilit­ies” open to them. “These kids are all superstar students,” he said. The Braille Challenge, he said, “is a doorway” to their future.

Indeed, among their ranks were children who aspired to be teachers, lawyers, chefs or musicians, even president.

With social activities, such as a dance and an icecream gathering, the competitio­n also helps students form lasting bonds with other blind or low-vision peers. Because many students attend regular public schools, the competitio­n is often the only place where they spend time with children like themselves.

Sergio Oliva, direction of national programs for the Braille Institute, said he has seen students grow from shy youngsters into confident young adults over their years in the competitio­n. He recalled one student at the dance a few years ago, hanging out with friends. “‘Oh, this is how it feels to go to prom,’ ” Oliva remembered the student saying. “It made me realize that this Braille Challenge is something they look forward to,” Oliva said.

Miles’ father, Kenny, said he was eager for his son to make new friends from across the country at his first Braille Challenge finals. The 8-year-old — who lost his vision because of eye cancer — practiced spelling street names on the drive down from Manteca to prepare for the competitio­n.

Though it was his first time in the finals, Miles wasn’t nervous. Sitting in the courtyard of a USC apartment complex, where his family was staying courtesy of the Braille Institute, the youngster rattled off trivia about the history of Braille and his dreams of visiting every national park, among a dozen other topics. He had studied enough.

“Same old, same old,” he said, grinning.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS in the junior varsity category take part in the Braille Challenge on Saturday. Fifty finalists from across the United States and Canada, including five from California, participat­ed in five age groups.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times STUDENTS in the junior varsity category take part in the Braille Challenge on Saturday. Fifty finalists from across the United States and Canada, including five from California, participat­ed in five age groups.

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