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Since Practice Reports do not have abstracts, we have provided an extract of the beginning of the full text.
The air was redolent with freshly baked bread and newly cut flowers as I approached the checkout counter at the supermarket. The familiar sound of the bar-code scanner caught my attention as I neared the cash register. I placed my last item on the conveyor belt and noticed the sound of the bar-code scanner again. The sound took on a whole new meaning. In that instant, I realized that by printing a bar code on the underside of a braille page and placing that page on a pressure-sensitive platform, with the addition of synthesized speech, one could establish a new method of braille instruction. Now it might be possible for blind students of all ages to use programmed braille instruction without learning any complicated commands. I had no idea that this spark of an idea would gather momentum and actually come to fruition in the form of a stand-alone braille learning station. Little did I know that I was about to embark on a journey—an intellectual whirlwind that would sweep me along for five years and beyond.
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