I would have no objection to paying a fee for classes. I'm not sure of
its feasibility simply because of numbers. Computer centers, community
colleges, adult schools have enrollees from their communities; they may
only get one disabled person. A friend recently enrolled in an adult
school for some windows 95 training; they handed him the tutorial from
jaws and that was the extent of the training. My stepdaughter worked as a
teacher's aide at an adult school; classes were geared for people to learn
at their own pace; they had books and exercises and tests at each level.
They would not know what to do with a visually impaired person; they do
not know keyboard commands; as good as my stepdaughter is, you take her
mouse away from her and she's lost. I think we are just too scattered to
make such classes feasible.
I would bet that most community college or adult schools lack accessible
and adaptive equipment.
Doris Fisher
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Bellflower, California