From Baku to the World: The BrailleTeach Story — Aliyev, Burchell, Vaid, Dickinson & George
Here, Aaron Di Blasi spotlights BrailleTeach—a multilingual, audio-guided handheld trainer built around six oversized toggles laid out like a Braille cell—as a practical answer to stalled early Braille literacy where teachers and budgets are scarce. Rooted in a 2016 encounter with a newly blind adult and focused on “dignity through literacy,” the device pairs touch with voice prompts across eight modes for letters, numbers, and symbols, adds one-minute challenges for speed, and aims to take learners through the basics in roughly three months. It’s lightweight (~250 g) with speaker and headphone jack, recharges via micro-USB, ships today in US/UK English, German, Spanish, Azerbaijani, and Russian (Arabic and Turkish in development), and is meant to complement—not replace—teachers. The need is urgent, framed by large, under-served populations and constrained classroom realities.
