Friday, April 5, 2013

Encyclopedia of Sports & Recreation for People with Visual Impairments By Andrew Leibs A Book in the Series: Critical Concerns in Blindness



Encyclopedia of Sports & Recreation for People with Visual Impairments By Andrew Leibs A Book in the Series: Critical Concerns in Blindness

288 pp. Information Age Publishing
$39.09 (Paperback, online)

http://infoagepub.com/products/Encyclopedia-of-Sports-Recreation-for-People-with-Visual-Impairments


Not long ago, most blind and visually impaired people grew up without ever playing sports; they sat on the sidelines, and kept score during gym-protected rather than included. In the 1980s, few people had ever heard of the Paralympic Games or accessible recreation.

Today, promising blind athletes can receive residency at the US Olympic Training Center; runners compete for prize money and national championships, and most ski resorts offer adaptive programs throughout the year where blind people can ski, cycle, and kayak-often for free.

The Paralympic movement, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and ever-increasing expectation for inclusion among the disabled have inspired an explosion of accessible sports, fitness, and recreation programs that accommodate the blind.

The Encyclopedia of Sports & Recreation for People with Visual Impairments is the first consumer-focused, action-oriented guide to this new world of accessible activity, profiling the people, programs, and products that are helping move blind and visually impaired people from the sidelines into the game.

This groundbreaking guide profiles every accessible blind sport and recreation activity with entries that outline how athletes (both novice and elite) got involved in the sport and how participation has shaped their life. The book also profiles major blind sports organizations and includes chapter and resource listings on camps and accessible recreation providers.

Through this book, blind people will be inspired to embrace sports as the rest of society does-as a vital component of personal expression and human interaction that opens paths to adventure, confidence, and lifelong health and fitness.

CONTENTS


Foreword, Lauren J. Lieberman. Preface. Acknowledgments. Part I: Sports and Recreation Popular Among the Blind and Visually Imp[aired: Alpine Skiing. Archery. Audio Darts. Auto Racing. Basketball. Beep Baseball. Biathlon. Bowling. Curling. Cycling. Fencing. Fitness. Futsal (Five-a-Side Soccer). Goalball. Golf. The Great Outdoors. Hiking and Mountain Climbing. Horseshoe Pitching. Judo. Kayaking and Canoeing. Nordic Skiing. Rowing. Running. Sailing. Scuba Diving. Showdown. Skating. Surfing. Swimming. Tennis. Torball. Triathlon. Waterskiing. Weightlifting and Powerliftng. Wrestling. Yoga. Part II: Conversations on Sports, Recreation, and Blindness. Part III Accessible Recreation Resources for the Blind and Visually Impaired. Sports and Summer Camps. Accessible Sports and Recreation Organizations. International Organizations. National Organizations. Accessible Recreation Providers. Afterword, Mark Lucas. Bibliography. Index.

About Andrew Leibs:
Andrew Leibs is Guide to Assistive Technology for About.com. His books include: A Field Guide for the Sight-Impaired Reader and Sports and Games of the Renaissance (ABC-CLIO). His disability writings have in: the Boston Globe, Disability Studies Quarterly, Exceptional Parent, and the San Francisco Examiner, among others. His athletic pursuits include five Boston Marathons and a 3,400-mile coast-to-coast bicycle trek.



Thank you!
Andrew
603.433.9157
Skype: andrewleibs

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