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2001 News Releases
Hubble Book Helps Visually Impaired Students Touch the Stars
June 4, 2001
 "These kind of feel like stalagmites in a cave," explains
Paul. |
Students who are visually impaired now have a unique
opportunity to touch the stars and experience some of NASA's
spectacular discoveries.
Majestic space images from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope,
including those taken by the JPL-developed and built Wide
Field and Planetary Camera 2, are part of a new Braille book
that combines tactile illustrations with striking images of
planets, star clusters and nebulae.
The book, "Touch the Universe: A NASA Braille Book of
Astronomy," is the brainchild of Bernhard Beck-Winchatz, an
astronomer and faculty member at DePaul University, Chicago,
Ill.
Teaming up with astronomer and author Noreen Grice of
Boston, Beck-Winchatz
developed the book with a $10,000 Hubble Space Telescope grant
for education programs. In 1999, Grice published "Touch The
Stars," a book with touchable pictures based on drawings of
constellations, comets, galaxies and other astronomical
objects
To allow both blind and sighted readers to enjoy the
Hubble images in "Touch the Universe," Grice developed clear
tactile overlays for each image. The overlays were sent to
Benning Wentworth, a science teacher and astronomy enthusiast
at the Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind in Colorado
Springs. His students evaluated each image for clarity and
provided important suggestions for needed changes.
The book is for middle school students, high school
students, and adults alike, with and without sight. Four
hundred copies will be printed in the first run, and the book
will sell for slightly above production cost so earnings can
offset future updates and production of a second edition. The
project received grants for education from NASA's Office of
Space Science, Washington, D.C.
Photos of students from the Colorado School for the Deaf
and Blind examining images from "Touch the Universe" are
available at http://analyzer.depaul.edu/ttu. The California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena manages JPL for NASA.
Contacts: JPL/Jane Platt (818) 354-0880
Space Telescope Science Institute/Ray Villard (410) 338-4514
AAS Press Room (626) 844-6037
JPL Media Relations Office
2001-121
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