When you are blind, you obviously can't see the regular print on books, signs, or anything for that matter. It's just like a foreign language. They need to learn it so that they can read what normal sighted people read.
you can learn braille in schools for blind people
People who attend schools for the blind learn how to deal with their disability. They will learn to read in braille.
Haha I don't know how blind people learned braille but if I did I wouldn't be writing this right now but thanks for trying :]
not as hard as you are blind.
by hand syombles
Louis Braille developed a system of raised dots that can be felt with the fingers to represent letters and symbols. Through touch, blind people can read and write using Braille by tracing their fingers over the dots on a page. He taught blind people to use Braille through his school in Paris, where he demonstrated the method and helped students learn how to read and write with it.
Braille is a system of writing that depends on the sense of touch. You don't read it by looking at it, but by feeling it. Blind people learn Braille the same way you learn to read, only by touching instead of looking at the letters.
It enables the blind and visually impaired to learn and function more independently in everyday life.
They can hear and if they need to read they have braille.
Anyone that is blind or has very poor eyesight. Some sighted people can also learn it, possibly to work with blind people and help them.
Unfortunately, only a minority of blind people know and use braille. This is for a variety of reasons, but the most common are: --many people become blind when they are elderly and do not want to take the time and effort to learn braille --technology, especially recorded books and text-to-speech engines are replacing many documents that were previously provided in braille --there are not enough braille teachers to instruct blind students now that most blind students are mainstreamed instead of being sent to special segregated residential schools for the blind
Non-blind people can understand Braille through tactile exploration and learning the patterns of raised dots that represent letters and numbers. They may use tools like Braille books or tactile diagrams to familiarize themselves with the Braille alphabet. Additionally, some non-blind individuals might learn Braille to communicate with visually impaired people or as part of their education in accessibility and inclusion. Understanding Braille requires practice and sensory engagement to effectively interpret the dot configurations.