Access to opportunities.

AuthorCattivelli, Adrian
PositionOAS

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

IN CENTRAL AMERICA and the Dominican Republic, several specialized computer resource centers are offering people with visual impairments the opportunity to learn new technologies. The project--initiated by the OAS and the Foundation of the Spanish National Organization of the Blind for Latin America (FOAL)--last year benefited more than 700 blind people in the region.

Take, for example, Carlos Aquino, who participated in computer classes at a center in Teculutan, Guatemala. Every Friday for six months, the young man would travel some two hours each way from his home in Puerto Barrios for a long day of study before making the journey back home. In the process, he mastered "a powerful communications tool" and acquired new confidence.

"It was worth it," he said. Although he had some computer skills before taking the course, he added, "I could never put them into practice, because I wasn't sure that what I was writing was correct."

The computers at the resource centers are equipped with Braille keyboards and a software program called JAWS (Job Access with Speech), which reads aloud the content that appears on a computer screen. This technology gives blind users access to a range of Windows applications, such as PowerPoint, Excel, Word, and Internet Explorer, among others. JAWS can "speak" In several different languages; users can even choose whether to hear the Spanish of Latin America or Spain.

Eight such resource...

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