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The Braille Alphabet Board is a portable, high-quality wooden tool designed for teaching Braille to individuals of all ages. Measuring 22 x 16 x 0.64 cm, it features raised dots for tactile learning and engraved letters for sighted assistance, making it an essential resource for educators and parents alike.
K**.
Very large Braille dots
These are large Braille dot set into a shallow channel. As an adult, sighted, non-Braille reader, I am able to recognize the letter patterns with some difficulty. This alphabet board compares with the aluminum board in the image provided. The aluminum board dots are larger and more prominent than those created by the Reizen Braille Labeler. The Braille dots in the "Shapes" board book by DK are intermediate between the aluminum Braille alphabet board and Reizen labeler dots. I am not able to recognize the smaller patterns with my unskilled fingers.
T**N
Simple & Clear
I am losing my sight. If you are too, be proactive and learn Braille now. Don't wait. I learned that A-J are the same as 0-9 on my first day.
L**Y
Raised dots are faintly raised
Braille is written with a cluster of 6 dots with varying dots raised to indicate letters and numbers. With this board, only the dots are raised giving no indication where those dots are on a 6-cell cluster. This could be made in a better way to indicate where each raised dot it within the 6 cell cluster. Even seeing people such as myself, I had to reference a Braille alphabet to learn the letters and numbers
J**.
Incorrect numbers
The pegs for the letters were correct, but the pegs for the numbers were incorrect. Unfortunately, it looks like they're missing the left column of pegs so you can't differentiate A through I when you're simply using your hands and not sight.
M***
Average Quality, Nice Tool To Help Sighted People & Young Kids Learn
Small board with ABCs & Numbers. I'd call it average quality. Good for introducing braille, helpful brain activities for sighted people & young kids.4 stars from me!
A**A
Not sure if this would really be beneficial
I don't know if this would benefit someone visually impaired. The dots are not raised enough for a new learner. It worked for what I had planned for it. I homeschool my kids, and we used this as a learning tool to try to imagine what it would be like if we lost sight. It was a poor comparison, but I saw this and thought it would help them learn. Kids use it to write "code" for each other.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
2 months ago