Career Perspectives: Interviews with Blind and Visually Impaired ProfessionalsTwenty achievers from a wide range of professions, including law, medicine, journalism, science and management, describe in their own words what it took to pursue and attain career success in a sighted world. |
Contents
Mitch Pomerantz | 14 |
Harry P McClintock III | 28 |
Rudolph Lutter | 54 |
DeVour | 68 |
Timothy T Fenerty | 84 |
Common terms and phrases
adds American Foundation Art Schreiber arts degree assistant attorney bachelor of arts bachelor of science Barrett believes blind and visually blind person blind students braille skills brailler Campbell Career Perspectives Carl Schmitt clients closed-circuit television counselor daily living skills declined DeVour disabled Doug Martin families of visually Fenerty Florida Fort Worth glaucoma graduate Hanamura Harrell high school interviews Kambourian KKOB later law school learned braille learned cane travel lieves lost his sight mainstream Marilyn Lutter Martin Marzulla master's degree McClintock McCready Mississippi School notes Oregon Overbrook Perkins brailler Pomerantz prospective employers psychology public school recalls received a bachelor respiratory therapy retinitis pigmentosa Ricards Rosenthal says Schmitt School of Law Schreiber science degree seeking a professional sighted readers ter's degree therapist tion Torpey velop vision Visually Handicapped visually impaired persons Visually Impaired Professionals visually impaired young voice synthesizer Washington Westpheling