Alabama Bicentennial Learning Activity #291

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Alabama Bicentennial Learning Activity #291 Alabama Bicentennial Learning Activity #291 Activity Title * What was life like when Helen Keller was a little girl? Author * Anne Russell School * Brooks Elementary School School System * Lauderdale Online Resource Title * Helen Keller at age 7. Online Resource URL * http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/photo/id/3167 Online Resource Description * Helen Keller is age 7. She is holding a small dog in her lap. Content Standard * 11. Interpret various primary sources for reconstructing the past, including documents, letters, diaries, maps, and photographs. • Comparing maps of the past to maps of the present E G H CG 12. Explain the significance of representations of American v Description * 11. Interpret various primary sources for reconstructing the past, including documents, letters, diaries, maps, and photographs. • Comparing maps of the past to maps of the present Students will look at primary sources from the past and compare and contrast ways of life from the past to today. We will look at a picture of Helen Keller when she was 7 years old . Students will answer the following questions: 1. What are some things in the picture that you can see that lets us know that Helen Keller lived a long time ago? 2. What are some things in the picture that you could find in your house today? 3. Looking at some more documents and letters from the time that Helen Keller lived, how are things different today? We will look at other primary sources such as a letter written by Helen Keller to Mrs. Burton. Content Standard Description Content Standard Description Phase * Opening Activity Description * Today boys and girls, we are going to look at the life of a famous Alabamian who lived very close to us. We are going to compare her life story to ours , to find the differences and the things that are the same. We are going to use actual pictures of Helen Keller and a letter that she wrote to another lady. But first , let's read a story about Helen Keller and find out who she was and what about her made her so famous. The story I am about to read is titled "A Picture Book of Helen Keller. Bloom's Taxonomy * Remembering Understanding Applying Assessment Strategies * We will do hands on activities that will help students to gain a better understanding of Helen Keller's life and the way she lived. Students will go through stations and experience first hand what people in Helen Keller's life time had to do to survive. Station 1 - Students will follow a recipe and make flapjacks. Station 2 - Students will follow a recipe and make butter; Students will also use a washboard and soap to wash clothes. Station 3 - Students will compare a map of Tuscumbia in the 1890's and a map of today and answer questions such as *Can you spot the property belonging to the Kellers? * Find Helen Keller's birthplace *How does Tuscumbia now compare to Tuscumbia then? * What looks the same? What looks different? Have students draw a replica of the map. Station 4 - Have different examples of Braille books as well as other books about Helen Keller for students to read. Advanced Preparation * Have ingredients , measuring cups, recipes set out at specific stations. Have maps of Tuscumbia then and now for students to compare. Find books about Helen Keller, Annie Sullivan, and Braille books. Variation Tips (Optional) Notes/Recommendations (Optional) Attach a File lesson_plans__helen_keller.pdf 9.34 MB · PDF Attach a File Attach a File Created 18 Jul 2018 99.111.94.201 11:35:11 PM IP Address PUBLIC Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Helen Keller Birthplace 300 North Commons Street, West Tuscumbia, Alabama 35674 888.329.2124 256.383.4066 helenkellerbirthplace.org Muscle Shoals National Heritage Area University of North Alabama One Harrison Place, UNA Box 5231 Florence, AL 35632-0001 msnha.una.edu 256.765.5028 [email protected] Like us on Facebook & follow us on Twitter Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. Journey to Tuscumbia, 1887 3. Anne Sullivan and the Manual Alphabet 4. Investigating Ivy Green 5. Helen Keller’s Life After “Water”: Analyzing Primary Sources 6. Helen Keller’s Legacy 7. Curriculum Standards Addressed by these Activities Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Page 2 Introduction This curriculum packet is designed to provide resources and suggest activities for 4th grade classes studying the life of Helen Keller. In particular, it is de- signed to supplement a visit to Ivy Green: The Helen Keller Birthplace. Howev- er, many of the activities may be adapted for use with younger or older stu- dents, and to be used individually. Teachers should feel free to pick and choose those parts of this packet which best suit their classroom needs. Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Page 3 Journey to Tuscumbia, 1887 Summary: This activity is based on maps and discussion questions related to Anne Sullivan’s journey from the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston to the Keller home in Tuscumbia. Materials: Ideally, students should have access to computers to view online maps. However, maps or portions of maps may be downloaded and/or printed, and a printed atlas may be used. Activity: In 1887, Anne Sullivan arrived in Tuscumbia after a train ride of several days. Travelling from the Per- kins School for the Blind in Boston to Tuscumbia was grueling for the prospective teacher. Her train ticket took her from Boston, to Philadelphia, to Baltimore and then to Washington, D.C.. In D.C. she missed her next train and had to spend the night in an uncomfortable hotel. After D.C., her route went through Lynchburg and Roanoke, Virginia, then Knoxville and Chattanooga, TN and then finally Tuscum- bia. Have students trace Anne’s route using this railroad map of the United States created by G.W. and C.B. Colton & Co. in 1882: http://www.loc.gov/item/gm71000840. The Library of Congress website allows students to view both the entire map and to zoom in on details. As another option, you may wish to download and print out key portions of the map. Suggested discussion questions: How many cities did Anne pass through on her trip? How many miles of track? Does anything about her route surprise you? Did Anne take the most direct path from Boston to Tuscumbia? Using an atlas or Google maps, have students plan a trip from Boston to Tuscumbia on interstates and major highways. How does their route differ from Anne’s? How many miles and how long would their trip take by car? Using an online trip planning site, plan an airline itinerary from Boston to Tuscumbia. Where and how many times would you have to change planes? How long would that trip take? Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Page 4 The following map shows Tuscumbia in the 1890s. Can your students spot the property belonging to the Kellers? Find the Helen Keller Birthplace on a current map. How does Tuscumbia now compare to Tuscumbia then? What looks the same? What looks different? Can students estimate about where the Kellers’ house was on the 1896 map? Excerpted from: Bacon, Delhos H.. Map of Colbert County, Alabama. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co. Engravers, 1896, c1895. American Memory. Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/ item/2011590022. References: Nielsen, Kim E. Beyond the Miracle Worker: The Remarkable Life of Anne Sullivan Macy and Her Extraor- dinary Friendship with Helen Keller. Boston: Beacon Press, 2009: 76-77. Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Page 5 Anne Sullivan and the Manual Alphabet Summary: Students will use a primary source to examine Anne Sullivan’s method of communicating with Helen Keller. Materials: South Carolina Institution For The Education of the Deaf And The Blind (n.d.) (page 2). http://memory.loc.gov/cgi- bin/query/h?ammem/eaa:@field%28NUMBER+@band% 28ncdeaa+B0312)) This primary source can be downloaded through the Library of Congress website and printed for classroom use. Helen Keller reading a woman's fingers as an- Activity: other woman watches. (c1914) How do you communicate with someone who cannot see or hear? At the Perkins School for the Blind, Anne Sullivan learned to use the manual alphabet to communicate with Laura Bridgman, the first deafblind person to be successfully educated in the United States. Later, Anne studied the records of Laura’s time at the school in order to prepare to teach Helen. When Anne arrived at Ivy Green, she immediately began to speak to Helen using the alphabet. By forming the letters against Helen’s hand as Helen felt the position of Anne’s fingers, Anne was able to teach Helen these signs. The back of this broadside (see Materials) from the South Carolina Institution for the Education of the Deaf and the Blind uses illustrations to demonstrate the letters of the manual alphabet. As a class, practice the letters as they are shown on the broadside. The most famous word Anne spelled to Helen is “water.” Divide the class into pairs. Have each student practice spelling “water” to their partner. Then let students try to spell their names. Finally, let each stu- dent secretly choose a word of six letters or less to spell to their partners. Are the partners able to un- derstand one another? How hard would it be to learn to speak this way? Helen Keller Birthplace Educator Resource Packet Page 6 Investigating Ivy Green Summary: Students will use cards with photographs and questions to guide their investigation of Ivy Green. After returning to school, students will use the cards to create a class exhibit.
Recommended publications
  • A Dramaturgical Analysis of the Miracle Worker
    Minnesota State University, Mankato Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato All Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects Capstone Projects 2016 A Dramaturgical Analysis of The Miracle Worker Abby Butzer Minnesota State University Mankato Follow this and additional works at: https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/etds Part of the Dramatic Literature, Criticism and Theory Commons, History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Commons, and the Otolaryngology Commons Recommended Citation Butzer, A. (2016). A Dramaturgical Analysis of The Miracle Worker [Master’s thesis, Minnesota State University, Mankato]. Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/etds/641/ This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects at Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects by an authorized administrator of Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. ! A!DRAMATURGICAL!ANALYSIS!FOR!! THE$MIRACLE$WORKER$ $ $ $ $ ! by! ABBY!BUTZER! ! ! ! A!THESIS!SUBMITTED! IN!PARTIAL!FULFILLMENT! OF!THE!REQUIREMENTS!FOR!THE!DEGREE!! MASTER!OF!ARTS! IN!! THEATRE!ARTS! ! MINNESOTA!STATE!UNIVERSITY,!MANKATO!
    [Show full text]
  • Appalachian Gateway Communities Initiative an Assessment And
    Appalachian Gateway Communities Initiative An Assessment and Recommendations Report for Natural and Cultural Heritage Tourism Development in Muscle Shoals National Heritage Area Alabama Funded by the National Endowment Appalachian Regional for the Arts Commission November 2011 Report prepared by ® Heritage Tourism Program National Trust for Historic Preservation Carolyn Brackett, Senior Program Associate Conservation Leadership Network The Conservation Fund Katie Allen, Training Associate The Appalachian Regional Commission’s mission is to be a strategic partner and advocate for sustainable community and economic development in Appalachia. The Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) is a regional economic development agency that represents a partnership of federal, state, and local government. Established by an act of Congress in 1965, ARC is composed of the governors of the 13 Appalachian states and a federal co-chair, who is appointed by the president. ARC funds projects that address the four goals identified in the Commission's strategic plan: 1. Increase job opportunities and per capita income in Appalachia to reach parity with the nation. 2. Strengthen the capacity of the people of Appalachia to compete in the global economy. 3. Develop and improve Appalachia's infrastructure to make the Region economically competitive. 4. Build the Appalachian Development Highway System to reduce Appalachia's isolation. www.arc.gov The National Endowment for the Arts was established by Congress in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service
    University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Masters Theses Dissertations and Theses July 2019 Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service Perri Meldon University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2 Part of the American Material Culture Commons, Cultural History Commons, Museum Studies Commons, Oral History Commons, Public History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Meldon, Perri, "Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service" (2019). Masters Theses. 787. https://doi.org/10.7275/14429212 https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2/787 This Open Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service A Thesis Presented by PERRI SARAH MELDON Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 2019 History Department Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service A Thesis Presented by PERRI SARAH MELDON Approved as to style and content by: _______________________________ Marla Miller, Chair _______________________________ David Glassberg, Member _______________________________ Brian Ogilvie, Chair, History Department ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In writing this thesis, I have tried to capture and honor the trailblazing work of accessibility specialists who have served and continue to serve in the National Park Service.
    [Show full text]
  • Interpreting Access: a History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service
    University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Masters Theses Dissertations and Theses July 2019 Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service Perri Meldon Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2 Part of the American Material Culture Commons, Cultural History Commons, Museum Studies Commons, Oral History Commons, Public History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Meldon, Perri, "Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service" (2019). Masters Theses. 787. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/masters_theses_2/787 This Open Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service A Thesis Presented by PERRI SARAH MELDON Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 2019 History Department Interpreting Access: A History of Accessibility and Disability Representations in the National Park Service A Thesis Presented by PERRI SARAH MELDON Approved as to style and content by: _______________________________ Marla Miller, Chair _______________________________ David Glassberg, Member _______________________________ Brian Ogilvie, Chair, History Department ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In writing this thesis, I have tried to capture and honor the trailblazing work of accessibility specialists who have served and continue to serve in the National Park Service.
    [Show full text]
  • Miracle Worker
    Every summer, for more than 50 years, the Helen Keller Birthplace Foundation has presented the outdoor performances of playwright William Gibson’s The Miracle Worker. The foundation is a private, not- for-profit organization. The Miracle Worker was designated as Alabama’s Official Outdoor Drama by the Alabama Legislature on April 23, 1991. Printed in U.S.A./4-17/30m “The Miracle Worker” has been a movie. It’s been a stage Butler would videotape performances of the Tuscumbia play, from Broadway to community theater, and it’s been show and send to Gibson for critiques. performed by actors who are household names. Gibson had a charge for Butler. But it’s performed nowhere like this, on the grounds of “You have people who come there because they want Ivy Green, where Helen Keller was born and raised, where to experience Helen Keller. They’re making an effort to this beautiful and timeless saga unfolded. travel to find this. They genuinely want to be there. This There is a certain goose-bump quality, especially show has to be better than anywhere in the world,” Gibson to realize as a pivotal scene unfolds around the Keller would tell him. family’s well pump, you’re sitting 100 feet from the actual There is something almost mystical about the cast. pump, where on April 5, 1887 water spewed onto Helen’s They’re not merely putting on a performance. They’re hands and her teacher, Annie Sullivan, had the miracle telling a story, a story that is at the core of Tuscumbia breakthrough in teaching language to the young girl left and which is dramatic and inspirational.
    [Show full text]
  • Helen Keller - on Tour
    THE MIRACLE WORKER 0. THE MIRACLE WORKER - Story Preface 1. A NEAR-DEATH EXPERIENCE 2. CHILD OF THE SILENT NIGHT 3. ANNE SULLIVAN 4. THE MIRACLE WORKER 5. HELEN KELLER - ON TOUR 6. THEY DID NOT TAKE MY SOUL 7. HELEN KELLER IN WORDS AND SOUND - PART 1 8. HELEN KELLER IN WORDS AND SOUND - PART 2 This image depicts the cottage at Ivy Green—the name for the Keller home in Tuscumbia, Alabama—where Helen Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, were living in April of 1877. Near the cottage is the now-famous pump where Anne helped Helen to understand that the letters she was signing into the child’s palm stood for the liquid substance that was coming out of the pump. At that moment, Helen's world completely changed. She was able to learn thirty words that same day. By the 5th of April, 1877, Annie Sullivan had made great progress with Helen. But the child was still incorrigible and particularly unruly when she was around her family. While walking between the main house and the cottage, Anne spotted people at the water pump. Might this be a good time to teach Helen about water? As water poured over one of Helen's hands, Anne fingerspelled the word "w-a-t-e-r" in the other. Suddenly ... a change came over Helen's face. She began to understand: What her teacher was spelling in the palm of one hand stood for what was pouring over the other. Helen later wrote about that moment of awakening, when she first realized the meaning and power of language: We walked down the path to the well-house, attracted by the fragrance of the honey-suckle with which it was covered.
    [Show full text]
  • Blind Rage: Letters to Helen Keller (Excerpt)
    part one Consciousness on Trial February 3 Dear Helen Keller: Allow me to introduce myself. I am a writer and part-time English profes- sor. I am American, married, middle-aged, middle class. Like you, I am blind, though not deaf. But the most important thing you need to know about me, and the reason for my letter, is that I grew up hating you. Sorry to be so blunt, especially on such short acquaintance, but one of the advan- tages of writing to a dead person is there’s no need to stand on ceremony. And you should know the truth from the start. I hated you because you were always held up to me as a role model, and one who set such an impos- sibly high standard of cheerfulness in the face of adversity. “Why can’t you be more like Helen Keller?” people always said to me. Or that’s what it felt like whenever your name came up. “Count your blessings,” they told me. “Yes, you’re blind, but poor little Helen Keller was blind and deaf, and no one ever heard her complain.” I am not alone in this. Many disabled people think you did our cause a lot of harm. Your life story inscribes the idea that disability is a personal tragedy to be overcome through an individual’s fortitude and pluck, rather than a set of cultural practices and assumptions, affecting many individu- als that could be changed through collective action. Lately, for reasons I can’t entirely explain, my feelings about you have mellowed.
    [Show full text]
  • National Park Service Thematic Outline for American History
    H34(418) To: All NPS Parks and Offices From: Acting Chief Historian Subject: National Park Service Thematic Outline for American History The National Park Service has long used a thematic framework or outline of American history and prehistory in studying, planning for, and interpreting historic sites. Such an outline was last published in 1987 in a yellow paperback titled History and Prehistory in the National Park Service and the National Historic Landmarks Program. Four years ago, Congress directed us to revise this outline, in cooperation with outside professional organizations, to better reflect current scholarship and represent the diversity of America's past. We recently completed this task and transmitted the revised outline to Congress. A copy is attached. The preamble to the outline summarizes its development, intended use, and underlying philosophy. It will serve us and other interested parties in evaluating historic properties for the National Register of Historic Places, for National Historic Landmark designation, and for potential addition to the National Park System; in assessing how well American history is represented in existing parks and other protected areas; and in enhancing park interpretive programs to provide a fuller understanding of the nation's past. Given the broad, conceptual nature of the outline, it will often need to be supplemented by more detailed outlines as particular topics are addressed. We plan to publish guidance and develop training for use of the revised outline this fiscal year. Meanwhile, feel free to call Patty Henry (202/343-8163), Barry Macintosh (202/343-8169), or me (202/343-8164) with any questions you may have about the outline and its use.
    [Show full text]
  • Alabama Properties Listed on the National Register Of
    ALABAMA PROPERTIES LISTED ON THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES As of February 19, 2019 KEY: C - Contributing CC - Conditionally Contributing DOE Determination of Eligibility HABS - Historic American Buildings Survey MPS - Multiple Property Submission MRA - Multiple Resource Nomination NC Noncontributing NHL - National Historic Landmark TR - Thematic Resource Nomination Click on the county name below to go directly to beginning of each county listing in this document. Autauga Baldwin Barbour Bibb Blount Bullock Butler Calhoun Chambers Cherokee Chilton Choctaw Clarke Clay Cleburne Coffee Colbert Conecuh Coosa Covington Crenshaw Cullman Dale Dallas Dekalb Elmore Escambia Etowah Fayette Franklin Geneva Greene Hale Henry Houston Jackson Jefferson Lamar Lauderdale Lawrence Lee Limestone Lowndes Macon Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Mobile Monroe Montgomery Morgan Perry Pickens Pike Randolph Russell St. Clair Shelby Sumter Talladega Tallapoosa Tuscaloosa Walker Washington Wilcox Winston AUTAUGA COUNTY BELL HOUSE Listed: 2/12/99 550 Upper Kingston Road 1893 Structures: 4 DANIEL PRATT HISTORIC DISTRICT Listed: 8/30/84 Roughly bounded by Northington Road, 1st, 6th, Bridge, & Court Streets - Prattville 1836-1930 Structures: 224 (192 C, 32 NC) LASSITER HOMEPLACE Listed: 7/17/97 Autauga County 15, 0.5 mi North of junction of Alabama 14 and County Road 15 - Autaugaville Vicinity c. 1825 Structures: 7 (4 C, 3 NC) MONTGOMERY-JANES-WHITTAKER HOUSE Listed: 10/25/74 (Buena Vista) HABS Reynolds Mill Road, three miles South of downtown Prattville Prattville 1821-1822 Structures: 1 MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL Listed: 11/29/01 (The Rosenwald School Building Fund and Associated Buildings MPS) 1820 County Road 57 - Prattville 1919-1937, 1950 Structures: 1 Return to Page 1 This listing is intended to be used as a guide only.
    [Show full text]
  • SPRING 2010 FY 10 BOARD of DIRECTORS the Alabama Writers’ Forum Taking Literature from Gown to Town President JAMES A
    FTHE JOURNAL OF THE ALABAMA WRITERS’ FORUM IRST DRAFT• SPRING 2010 FY 10 BOARD OF DIRECTORS The Alabama Writers’ Forum Taking Literature from Gown to Town President JAMES A. BUFORD, JR. When I first moved to Alabama sixteen years ago, my vision of the Auburn literary life was pretty sugar-plumb. I had spent the previous ten years Vice-President on various college campuses, both as a student and as a teacher, and I JULIE FRIEDMAN Fairhope was convinced I knew where the life of books belonged: in the cathe- Secretary dral-like silences of library stacks, in echoing old lecture halls, on the green carpentry of a manicured quad, and in the ad-hoc salons that met RUTH COOK DIANE PROTHRO Birmingham Kirk Curnutt is English wherever the pizza and libations happened to be cheapest. Treasurer Department chair It was thus something of a shock to arrive at Troy University’s BILL ELDER at Troy University- Montgomery campus as a newly-minted assistant professor and real- Montgomery Montgomery. His latest ize that not every learning environment took those accoutrements for Writers’ Representative novel is Dixie Noir. granted. In the parlance of the profession, my new employer was a JIM MURPHY “non-traditional” school, which in practical terms meant that the life- Montevallo style I associated with the liberal arts simply wasn’t relevant. There were no poetry slams or Writers’ Representative controversial figurers brought in to rattle the rafters, not even the bull sessions at which one MARIANNE MOATES WEBER Montgomery could debate whether this or that writer was the greatest of his generation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Miracle Worker
    ASF Study Materials for by William Gibson Study Materials written by: Susan Willis ASF Dramaturg [email protected] Contact ASF: 1.800.841.4273, www.asf.net 1 by William Gibson Welcome to The Miracle Worker The challenge of writing historical Characters drama is that we all know the ending and in Tuscumbia, Alabama: something of the major characters, so raw suspense does not drive the action Captain Keller, Helen's so much as a sense of watching how the father events happen. William Gibson dazzled the Kate Keller, his second wife, genre with his 1959 award-winning play, Helen's mother The Miracle Worker, dramatizing a superb James Keller, his son by his All-American story of a young woman and first marriage a child who face immense challenges and Helen Keller, blind and deaf triumph. The action is as physical as Rocky since a toddler and as intensely language-based as the Aunt Ev[eline], the Captain's recent filmArrival —and the climax comes sister down to the understanding of one word. A Doctor People usually consider The Miracle Viney, a black servant Worker to be "the play about Helen Keller." While Helen is indeed the play's focus of Martha servants' energy and the miracle happened within The well pump at Ivy Green, Helen Keller's Percy } children her, the actual worker of the miracle is Annie childhood home in Tuscumbia, Alabama, with cottage near the house in background Sullivan—the play is about Annie Sullivan at Perkins Institute, Boston: with Helen Keller. Gibson puts Annie's Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • From Isolation to Inclusion Eafblind International Was Formerly Known Das the International Association for the a Message from the Education of Deafblind People
    Number 43 • January – June 2009 From isolation to inclusion eafblind International was formerly known Das the International Association for the A message from the Education of Deafblind People. DbI Review appears twice yearly, the two president editions are dated January-June and July- December. Dear Friends and The editor will be pleased to receive articles, Colleagues news items, letters, notices of books and s you are in the process information on forthcoming events, such as conferences and courses, concerning deafblind A of reading this message children, young adults and older people. you are probably preparing Photographs and drawings are welcome; they for your well-deserved will be copied and returned. summer holiday or, in some All written material should be in the English cases, winter holiday. language and may be edited before publication. Within Deafblind It should be sent for publication to arrive by the International many changes date below. will be taking place in Opinions expressed in articles are those of the upcoming months. the author and should not be understood as These changes reflect our representing the view of DbI. commitment to the new I would like to take this DbI Review is also available on disk. If you are strategic plan and are being opportunity to mention just interested in receiving your copy in this format, please contact: developed with the support a few of my activities this of our membership at all year. Firstly, an extremely DbI Secretariat PO Box 143, Burswood levels. Your Management interesting conference WA 6100, Australia Committee and Council discussed Rubella Syndrome Telephone (08) 9473 5422 will be meeting during and the consequences during Facsimilie (08) 9473 5499 the European Conference the lifeline of those affected TTY (08) 9473 5488 in Senegallia, Italy, and by this virus.
    [Show full text]