Many people will find this hard to believe but years ago, I knew a
University math professor who was totally blind. He couldn't see a
thing. His wife would walk him to class and put a piece of chalk in
his hand and place his hand on the left side of the board and he would
start his lecture writing on the board while working out problems in
his head. Of course students would raise their hands and ask how to
work certain problems from the assigned exercises. The professors
wife would then read the problem to him from the book and the
professor would write it all out on the board while working it out in
his head, step by step. It was absolutely amazing. He was a very
gifted person, but the point that I want to make is that he was doing
real(!) paperless. It was paperless without the paper substitute of a
computer or handheld screen and I think that if we can do some of
that, then we have really accomplished something, but to substitute a
screen for writing on the fiber substance we call paper, well, anyone
with money can do that. That's no big deal, however what the blind
math professor was able to do, I believe was a very bigh deal, and I
think that we need to work on doing more of that and using our minds
more and encouraging our students to think and not rely on technology
and then like the blind professor, then we have really accomplished
something significant.
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