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September 16, 2008 |
Volume
16, Number 9
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Exceptional Teaching Founder Receives
Posthumous Honor as Company Continues
Growth

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Helene Holman,
left, and Susan Taylor offer tools for special needs.
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By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
The accomplishments of the late founder of Exceptional Teaching, 5673
W. Las Positas Blvd., Suite 207, will be honored in early October as
Sally Mangold, Ph.D., is inducted into the Hall of Fame for Leaders and
Legends of the Blindness Field, in Louisville, Ky. Curated by the
American Printing House for the Blind, a large non-profit provider of
“accessible educational and daily living products,” the Hall of Fame
this year is adding just two professionals to its roster of 40
luminaries who have made significant contributions to the field over
the past century. Its first inductee was the world-renowned Helen
Keller.
Dr. Mangold is remembered as “a passionate proponent and champion” of
braille literacy throughout a long career of teaching blind and
visually impaired students and training their teachers. She is best
known for the “Mangold Developmental Program of Tactile Perception and
Braille Letter Recognition,” a landmark braille reading program that
has been translated into seven languages and used around the world. She
also developed the Speech Assisted Learning (SAL) System, an
audio-equipped braille learning device, under a grant from the National
Science Foundation.
Her legacy lives on in the business she established with her husband,
Phil Mangold, in 1974. Initially providing products for blind and
visually impaired children and adults, over the years Exceptional
Teaching increased its offerings to serve a wider range of special
learning needs. In 2005, shortly before Dr. Mangold’s death, Helene
Holman and her husband bought the company, with Helene taking over as
president. Holman had started with Exceptional Teaching eight years
previously to help on grant applications and since her arrival her
role—and her commitment—have steadily expanded.
The past few years under Holman’s leadership have seen the introduction
of SAL2, next-generation braille literacy courseware that runs on the
TTT (Talking Tactile Tablet), a device developed by partner Touch
Graphics, Inc. “The SAL2 system has been on the market for two years
now, and it is really starting to take off,” Holman enthuses. “We’re
designing new coursework for that product. We already sell it
internationally, in Canada and the U.K., but now our partner in New
York, which makes the hardware tablet, is looking to expand into the
European market.”
SAL2 is not the only recent innovation. This summer the company set up
a new on-site Learning Center to host a series of supplemental classes
incorporating a multi-sensory approach to reading. The Beginning
Reading Camp targets children entering Kindergarten, while the Summer
Reading Camp is designed for first- through third-graders. Another
group, Braille Camp, includes sessions at SAL2 Workstations led by a
credentialed teacher of the visually impaired.
Exceptional Teaching also carries a wide assortment of educational
games and toys, motivational reading games, and teaching and living
aids for those with special needs and learning disabilities. The full
gamut of products, from simple anti-roll crayons to Mangold exclusives
like raised-line coloring books, can be viewed online at www.exceptionalteaching.com.
For information on the Learning Center, call Holman at (925) 598 0082,
x. 101.
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