USA TODAY US Edition

Watching isn’t only way to take part

There’s much more for people with disabiliti­es, others to feel, hear, sense

- Phaedra Trethan

Chris Danielson remembered how lab periods inevitably went for him in school.

“If we did an experiment, I was always the note-taker,” he said. “I was never allowed to touch anything, to use the knife in dissection­s or touch anything in chemistry.”

Today, the 52-year-old is the spokespers­on for the National Foundation for the Blind. He recalled how “growing up, we were told STEM was not really for us.”

That idea is changing. The biggest astronomic­al event of the year − Monday’s total solar eclipse − will be a more inclusive spectacle because of a combinatio­n of technology and awareness.

“Nature is a shared human experience,” disability advocate Nash Dunn says.

Totality means inclusivit­y in Ind.

Dunn, president of Knox County Associatio­n for Remarkable Citizens (KCARC), said the southwest Indiana nonprofit, which offers services to children and adults with disabiliti­es, has been preparing for the eclipse along with the rest of the community. The area is within the eclipse’s path of totality.

Like a lot of other eclipse events taking place across the country, Community in Totality will include a DJ, food vendors, games and arts and crafts activities. But the afternoon-long event centers around helping people with physical, developmen­tal and cognitive disabiliti­es such as cerebral palsy, Down syndrome and autism view and participat­e in the eclipse.

LightSound boxes, which sync musical tones and other sounds with the changing shadows and light of the eclipse, can help people with visual impairment or blindness track the movements of the sun and moon, something Dunn described as akin to the sounds depicted in the 1968 film “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

“We’re playing around with different materials, too,” Dunn said. “A lot of folks we serve have sensory issues or they just can’t wear glasses,” a potentiall­y huge problem that could prevent people from safely viewing the eclipse.

Organizers are working on accommodat­ions, brainstorm­ing ideas like a canopy that would protect their eyesight while still providing a vantage point to view the eclipse.

Dunn said KCARC has also ramped up eclipse-related education “so everyone understand­s what it is and what it means, so they can understand what the event is and why it’s important, and how they can be part of it.”

The community has always been very supportive of KCARC’s work, Dunn said, ever since the organizati­on was founded in 1969 by parents who didn’t want their disabled children to be institutio­nalized but also needed services to keep them engaged and included. KCARC offers an array of services and employment opportunit­ies.

“A vibrant, healthy community is created by every person in it,” he said. “Everyone in this community is working to make sure the eclipse is positively impactful for all of us.”

Citizen scientists across the nation

The folks at ARISA Lab are busy, said co-founder and chief scientist Henry “Trae” Winter III.

They’ve been working to make sure as many people as possible can take part in the Eclipse Soundscape­s Project, a joint effort with NASA, the National Foundation for the Blind and scientists, educators and a small army of volunteers across the country.

The goal: To see how a total solar eclipse affects wildlife, collecting multisenso­ry recordings of how birds, animals and insects react to the moments of light, dark and every shade in between.

Winter said he grew up poor, thinking there was no place for him in discipline­s such as astronomy and astrophysi­cs that required years of education. That helped inform his desire, along with ARISA co-founder MaryKay Severino, to make science more open and accessible to all. ARISA stands for Advanced Research in Inclusion & STEAM Accessibil­ity.

Realizing he could make his way in science, the astrophysi­cist said, “was very powerful.”

“Science should be for everyone,” he said. “We want people to be able to do the science, working with scientists and with each other.”

There are a host of resources on the Eclipse Soundscape­s Project website (eclipsesou­ndscapes.org), including educationa­l materials, links to participat­ing organizati­ons, maps and even DIY kits for people to join the effort.

‘Sight is only one of our senses’

Annette Lutz, who is president of the Capital Chapter of the National Federation of the Blind of Ohio, said she’s excited about the project and experienci­ng her first total eclipse.

She’ll be outside on her deck in Columbus with her daughter and her rescue dog, Teddy. She wants to listen for the sounds of birds, insects and other living creatures. She wants to feel the changes in temperatur­e, the shifts in the wind, the way “day will become night, even if it’s just for a couple of minutes.”

“I am space-nerdy person,” she said. “So I’m fascinated by this. A lot of blind people are discourage­d from science, and we really try to tell folks, you do not have to see to be involved in science. There are plenty of blind scientists: chemists, physicists, astrophysi­cists. They do it because this is their passion. Blindness shouldn’t be a barrier to that.”

She’s self-employed and grateful for the flexibilit­y that affords, and she wants people to understand that the eclipse will be a multi-sensory phenomenon.

“Sight is only one of our senses,” she said. “We can fully enjoy this.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY ECLIPSE SOUNDSCAPE­S ?? Non-visual ways of experienci­ng a solar eclipse include feeling the shift in temperatur­e, listening to the sounds – and silence – of animals and using LightSound boxes, which sync sounds with the changing light. Another way is to take notes, as these observers did in Valles Caldera National Preserve in New Mexico in October.
PROVIDED BY ECLIPSE SOUNDSCAPE­S Non-visual ways of experienci­ng a solar eclipse include feeling the shift in temperatur­e, listening to the sounds – and silence – of animals and using LightSound boxes, which sync sounds with the changing light. Another way is to take notes, as these observers did in Valles Caldera National Preserve in New Mexico in October.

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