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In an Alaskan Yupik village, a blind 12-year-old, Apu, relies on his older cousin to guide him around the village. When a special teacher flies in to teach him how to use a cane, Apu is teased by the other kids and gets angry. Hearing about Apu's struggles at school, Grandfather sets up a ceremony in which Apu's extended family tell stories of ancestors bravely navigating the Alaskan wilderness using tools for survival. Apu's resistance to using a cane fades as he recognizes Grandfather's support cane and his own mobility cane as tools for independence, similar to the role of ancestral tools for survival in a harsh wilderness.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In an Alaskan Yupik village, a blind 12-year-old, Apu, relies on his older cousin to guide him around the village. When a special teacher flies in to teach him how to use a cane, Apu is teased by the other kids and gets angry. Hearing about Apu's struggles at school, Grandfather sets up a ceremony in which Apu's extended family tell stories of ancestors bravely navigating the Alaskan wilderness using tools for survival. Apu's resistance to using a cane fades as he recognizes Grandfather's support cane and his own mobility cane as tools for independence, similar to the role of ancestral tools for survival in a harsh wilderness.
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Autorenporträt
Mary Tellefson, M.A., M.S, holds licenses for K-12 principal, director of curriculum and instruction, teacher of the visually impaired, orientation and mobility specialist, and elementary education. She's taught blind and visually impaired learners at every grade level from early intervention to post-secondary learners attending universities over a 40-plus-year career. She has served in state and national organizations, created core content for O&M university-level training programs, developed and presented spatiotemporal development workshops across the U.S., and led the O&M team to create the Open Hands, Open Access (OHOA) training modules for interveners. She is well regarded in the field of orientation and mobility as innovative and industrious, often thinking outside the box to find solutions. She's published qualitative and action research manuscripts in the Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness (JVIB), Re: View, the Council for Exceptional Children Quarterly, and Future Reflections, an NFB Quarterly. The Culturally Responsive Orientation and Mobility Standards is her third published book. In 2021, she published two chapter books for children in grades four through seven, Two Canes on the Tundra and Blooming Besties (Orange Hat Publishing), featuring main characters who are blind. Mary lives in Edgerton, Wisconsin with her husband of 37 years. She has three children and seven grandchildren whom she sees weekly.