[absoft-members] [steve.noble@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx: [Blindmath] FW: White House Highlights STEM Innovators in the Disability Community as �Champions of Change�]

  • From: "John J. Boyer" <john.boyer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: absoft-members@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 17:34:50 -0500

The event can also be viewed later, I think on YouTube. 

----- Forwarded message from "Noble,Stephen L." <steve.noble@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 
-----

Subject: [Blindmath] FW: White House Highlights STEM Innovators in the 
Disability Community as �Champions of Change�
From: "Noble,Stephen L." <steve.noble@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 4 May 2012 19:38:21 +0000
To: "nfb-science@xxxxxxxxxx" <nfb-science@xxxxxxxxxx>, "blindmath@xxxxxxxxxx"
        <blindmath@xxxxxxxxxx>
List-Archive: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/blindmath_nfbnet.org>

Congratulations to all those being honored! 

----
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of Communications

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 7, 2012

 

White House Highlights STEM Innovators in the Disability Community as 
“Champions of Change”

WASHINGTON, DC – On Monday, May 7th, the White House will honor 14 individuals 
as Champions of Change for leading the fields of science, technology, 
engineering, and math for people with disabilities in education and employment. 
 

“STEM is vital to America’s future in education and employment, so equal access 
for people with disabilities is imperative, as they can contribute to and 
benefit from STEM,” said Kareem Dale, Special Assistant to the President for 
Disability Policy. “The leaders we’ve selected as Champions of Change are 
proving that when the playing field is level, people with disabilities can 
excel in STEM, develop new products, create scientific inventions, open 
successful businesses, and contribute equally to the economic and educational 
future of our country.”

 

The Champions of Change program was created as a part of President Obama’s 
Winning the Future initiative. Each week, a different sector is highlighted and 
groups of Champions, ranging from educators to entrepreneurs to community 
leaders, are recognized for the work they are doing to serve and strengthen 
their communities.

 

To watch this event live, visit www.whitehouse.gov/live at 1:30 pm ET on May 
7th.

 

The White House “Champions of Change” are:



Ralph Braun is the founder and CEO of The Braun Corporation. Diagnosed with 
Spinal Muscular Atrophy in 1947, he began using a wheelchair for mobility. 
Determined to maintain his independence, he engineered the world’s first 
motorized scooter and followed with the first accessible vehicle a few years 
later. The company grew substantially over the next decades, and today, The 
Braun Corporation is the worldwide leader of wheelchair accessible vehicles and 
wheelchair lifts in the mobility industry. What started as a part-time business 
operated from his parents’ garage has grown into an international corporation 
with over 800 employees. Ralph is now 71 years old and is the father of five 
adult children. He still lives and runs The Braun Corporation from his hometown 
of Winamac, Indiana with his wife, Melody.

 

Joseph Sullivan is president of Duxbury Systems, Inc., a small company that has 
specialized in software for braille since its founding in 1975, and which now 
employs two blind people and which provides braille translation software for 
more than 130 languages worldwide.  He has also served on many braille-related 
committees, including the Literary Braille and Computer Braille Committees of 
the Braille Authority of North America, was chair of the technical design 
subcommittee of the Unified English Braille (UEB) project of the International 
Council on English Braille (ICEB), and currently serves on the UEB Maintenance 
Committee of ICEB.  Joe believes that braille is the key to literacy for blind 
persons, that literacy is the key to an informed citizenry, and that an 
informed citizenry is essential to civilization.

 

University of North Texas (UNT) Biochemistry graduate student Nasrin Taei is 
developing a model peptide system to investigate the effects of mutations that 
cause sudden cardiac arrest in young adults. Her model system will be used for 
testing potential candidate drugs that ameliorate the structural effects of 
heart disease causing mutations. Nasrin is a member of Phi Theta Kappa an 
international honor society. As a STEM model, she tutored at the community 
college and mentored high school students, which led to her recognition at UNT 
as a Soaring Eagle. Nasrin is being honored as a Champion of Change for her 
humanitarianism and contributions toward discovering a treatment for heart 
disease and making a better future for people around the globe.

 

Maria Dolores Cimini, Ph.D. is the Assistant Director for Prevention and 
Program Evaluation at the University at Albany Counseling Center and has served 
as the Principal Investigator for over six million dollars in behavioral health 
projects funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Substance Abuse and 
Mental Health Services Administration, and the U.S. Department of Education 
during the past decade. As a scientist-practitioner, Dr. Cimini has been active 
in promoting access to STEM for students with disabilities, particularly young 
women with disabilities, through her work with the American Psychological 
Association’s Women with Disabilities in STEM Education Project for which she 
serves as Co-Chair and her mentoring of students and early career scientists on 
a national scale. Through her own experience as a scientist with a disability, 
she is helping our nation identify and enhance facilitators and address 
barriers to STEM education and career success for people with disabilities. Dr. 
Cimini is being honored as a Champion of Change for her work in enhancing 
access to the STEM disciplines by students with disabilities through her 
research, leadership, and mentoring efforts.

 

As a professional and a parent, Virginia Stern has been working for more than 
four decades to raise expectations of persons with disabilities, their 
families, educators, and employers, especially employers in science, 
technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). Since 1977 she was a guiding 
force of the Project on Science, Technology and Disability of the American 
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). She recognized that talented 
students with disabilities needed more than legislation and STEM degrees to 
gain employment in their chosen fields. In 1996 Mrs. Stern and her colleagues 
developed the flagship program, Entry Point!, to provide paid internships and 
develop career skills in the private and public sectors for students with 
disabilities in STEM. Hundreds of Entry Point! alumni have joined and continue 
to advance in the STEM workforce of the nation.

 

Steve Jacobs is President of IDEAL Group. Steve is dedicated to enhancing the 
accessibility of STEM curriculum for students with disabilities. Steve’s 
company offers software that translates printed STEM materials into digital 
formats for conversion into speech and Braille.  Steve’s company also developed 
fully-accessible STEM-enabled eBook reading software. Over the past 3-1/2 
years, Steve’s company has become one of the world’s largest developer of 
mobile accessibility applications with five million installations in 136 
countries. Steve is also working with many institutions to tech-transfer their 
STEM-related work to mobile platforms. These institutions include 
Smith-Kettlewell’s Video Description R&D Center, University of Oregon’s 
Mathematics eText Research Center, and Georgia Tech wireless RERC and 
sonification lab. Steve is a 1973 graduate of Ohio State University. Steve and 
wife Pauline have been married for 37 years. Pauline and Steve have two 
daughters, Shana and Jessica, and a granddaughter Brooke Christine… who is 
Steve’s boss.

 

Rafael San Miguel began his career at NASA working on the Space Shuttle 
program, and has spent the past 23 years as a scientist for The Coca-Cola 
Company.  He also serves as a board member of the Atlanta Speech School, an 
80-year old private institution focused on meeting the needs of those with 
speech and language based disabilities.  Rafael, who has been profoundly deaf 
since infancy, creates awareness about disability by focusing on ability as he 
inspires young people to pursue education in science and math. Using his unique 
format that presents science in an exciting way, he has volunteered at schools 
both locally and in communities where he travels by connecting with underserved 
schools through the volunteer network of Points of Light. Rafael is now turning 
his energies toward a call to action and creating an initiative called the U.S. 
Science Project focused on inspiring individual scientists, businesses, 
legislators and community leaders to scale efforts for engaging in 
impact-driven volunteerism to begin to fill the science deficit in our nation 
through a volunteer Science Corps. 

 

David H. Rose, EdD, is a developmental neuropsychologist and educator whose 
primary focus is on the development of new technologies for learning. In 1984, 
Dr. Rose co-founded CAST, a not-for-profit research and development 
organization whose mission is to improve education, for all learners, through 
universal design for learning (UDL). Dr. Rose also teaches at Harvard’s 
Graduate School of Education where he has been on the faculty for more than 25 
years. He is the author or editor of numerous books and articles on UDL, and 
the winner of awards from the Smithsonian Museum, the Tech Museum, and others.

 

Christine Reich is Director of Research and Evaluation at the Museum of 
Science, Boston, one of the world's largest science centers. The Museum of 
Science brings science, technology, engineering, and math to about 1.5 million 
visitors a year through its dynamic programs and interactive exhibits. As 
Director of Research and Evaluation, Christine oversees a department that 
conducts research and evaluation studies related to various aspects of the 
Museum experience, but her passion and expertise focus on researching ways to 
advance the inclusion of people with disabilities in museum learning. Prior to 
her current position, Christine worked as a museum educator and an exhibit 
planner, specializing in the development of museums exhibitions and programs 
that are inclusive of people with disabilities.

 

George Kerscher began his IT innovations in 1987 and coined the term "print 
disabled."  George is dedicated to developing technologies that make 
information not only accessible, but also fully functional in the hands of 
persons who are blind or who have a print disability. He believes properly 
designed information systems can make all information accessible to all people 
and is working to push evolving technologies in this direction. As Secretary 
General of the DAISY Consortium and President of the International Digital 
Publishing Forum (IDPF), Kerscher is a recognized international leader in 
document access.  In addition, Kerscher is the Senior Officer of Accessible 
Technology at Learning Ally in the USA.  He chairs the DAISY/NISO Standards 
committee, and serves on the USA National Instructional Materials Accessibility 
Standard (NIMAS) Board.

 

As a child in the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind in 1949, 
John Boyer found that contemporary scientific material in braille was almost 
non-existent. John has never lost the sense of frustration he felt when the 
braille resources available to him were insufficient to satisfy his hunger for 
more science education. John believes that is the motive for his life’s work. 
He obtained a master's degree in Computer science, with a minor in electronics 
engineering at the University of Wisconsin in 1980. His first company was a 
Braille publishing enterprise which served an international client base. 
Abilitiessoft, Inc., his current company, creates open source adaptive software 
which makes Web pages available to blind persons through a Braille display. The 
current project, BrailleBlaster, will allow the integration of text with 
Braille graphics such as maps and graphs into a format accessible to blind 
people.

 

Dr. Dimitri Kanevsky is a Research staff member in the Speech and Language 
Algorithms Department at the IBM T.J.Watson Research Center. Prior to joining 
IBM, he worked at a number of prestigious centers for higher mathematics, 
including the Max Planck Institute in Germany and the Institute for Advanced 
Studies in Princeton, New Jersey. In 1979, he invented a multi-channel 
vibration based hearing aid, and founded a company to produce and market this 
device. He also developed the first uses for speech recognition as a 
communication aid for deaf users over the telephone, for which he received an 
award from the National Search for Computing Applications from John Hopkins to 
Assist Persons with Disabilities. In 1998 Dr. Kanevsky introduced the first 
remote transcription stenographic services over the Internet, and created the 
ViaScribe product speech recognition concept and system that allows automatic 
transcription of lectures in real-time and the creation of multimedia notes. At 
IBM he has been responsible for developing the first Russian automatic speech 
recognition system, as well as key projects for embedding speech recognition in 
automobiles and broadcast transcription systems. He currently holds 152 US 
patents and was granted the title of Master Inventor IBM in 2002 , 2005 and 
2010. His conversational biometrics based security patent was recognized by 
MIT, Technology Review Magazine, as one of five most influential patents for 
2003. His work on Extended Baum-Welch algorithm in speech, another initiative 
for embedding speech recognition in automobiles and his work on conversational 
biometrics was recognized as science accomplishment  in 2002 , 2004 and 2008 by 
the Director of Research at IBM . In 2005 Dimitri Kanevsky received an Honorary 
degree (Doctor of Laws, honoris causa) from the University College of Cape 
Breton.  He was elected a member  of  the Word Technology Network in 2004 and 
was a Chairperson of IT Software Technology session at Word Technology Network 
Summit 2005 in San-Francisco, Calif. He also organized a special session on 
Large Scale Optimization at ICASSP 2012 in Japan.

 

Henry Wedler is a graduate student at the University of California, Davis, 
working towards his Ph.D. in organic chemistry. Inspired by programs offered by 
the National Federation of the Blind in high school and with encouragement from 
professors, colleagues and others, Henry gained the confidence to challenge and 
refute the mistaken belief that STEM fields are too visual and, therefore, 
impractical for blind people.  Henry is not only following his own passion; he 
is working hard to develop the next generation of scientists by founding and 
teaching at an annual chemistry camp for blind and low-vision high school 
students. Chemistry Camp demonstrates to these students, by example and through 
practice, that their lack of eyesight should not hold them back from pursuing 
their dreams. Henry was nominated by Douglas Sprei of Learning Ally, a 
nonprofit that produces accessible audio textbooks for blind and learning 
disabled students, which is an indispensable resource that allowed him to excel 
in school.

 

Sina Bahram is a PhD student in the Department of Computer Science at North 
Carolina State University.  His field of research is Human Computer Interaction 
(HCI).  Sina's primary interest is the dynamic translation of interfaces, with 
an emphasis on innovative environments being used by persons with visual 
impairment (PWVI) to facilitate learning, independence, and exploration.  His 
other research interests focus on using AI inspired techniques to solve 
real-world user-centric problems.  When he is not busy with his academic 
pursuits, Sina enjoys staying on the bleeding edge of technology and working 
with small, high-tech startup companies.  Sina's passion for his field 
originally stems from the fact that he is mostly blind and uses assistive 
technologies such as a screen reader to navigate computer systems and 
technological devices.  After experimenting in the fields of bioinformatics, 
privacy policy/law, and systems security, Sina discovered that his heart lies 
in helping users of all capabilities use computer systems more effectively and 
efficiently.  He has worked in HCI full-time ever since.


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----- End forwarded message -----

-- 
John J. Boyer; President, Chief Software Developer
Abilitiessoft, Inc.
http://www.abilitiessoft.com
Madison, Wisconsin USA
Developing software for people with disabilities


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