
When students receive intensive, consistent instruction in access technology, independence changes quickly. This senior, who is was fully blind, demonstrates advanced JAWS screen reader skills. Within her first 3 months of focused instruction she learned English from her Russian Jaws and just continued to advance.
Watch her hands closely. Her fingers move across the keyboard faster than many sighted users while independently navigating email, documents, research, and computer tasks using speech feedback alone. This level of efficiency is not luck or “talent.” It comes from direct instruction, repetition, structured keyboarding, and access tech instruction while learning how to think through technology nonvisually.
Far too many blind and low vision students are never taught these skills early enough. Instead, they are often slowed down by inaccessible materials, over-reliance on visual methods, or limited technology instruction. True independence occurs when students learn the keyboard, screen reader commands, workflow, and problem-solving strategies necessary to keep pace with the real world.
JAWS is not simply a reading tool. It is access to:
- Education
- Employment
- Communication
- Research
- Independence
The speed demonstrated in this video comes from mastering keyboard commands, touch typing, orientation to the computer environment, and daily use of technology in real academic tasks.
This is why early and intensive technology instruction matters.
