[NABS-L] Question about writing essays
Nikki
nikkidadlani at gmail.com
Tue Jun 20 00:55:25 UTC 2023
Hi,
From my understanding of this, I have not heard of an accessible grammar checking program (last time I heard, grammarly is not accessible at all.)
That being said, I would strongly suggest checking your document line by line for spelling mistakes. Additionally, if you are a braille reader, having a braille display handy will help with finding those little grammar issues as well (I find that this helps a great deal.)
Hope this helps. Also, I hope that your professor understands the position you are in with the technology and software that you use.
Nikhil Dadlani
> On Jun 19, 2023, at 5:41 PM, Osmond Kwan via NABS-L <nabs-l at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Dear Friends, hope you are well.
>
> I've been subscribed to some blind mailing lists, but I do not post
> often. I have an issue related to being a student.
>
> I am blind and use JAWS. I use Microsoft Word for word processing.
> When I do a spell check and grammar check, JAWS will say what mistakes
> are made and how to correct them. However, I have a sighted professor
> that tells me that I have over 40 grammar mistakes. It appears that
> Word does not catch everything but there is software that sighted
> people can use to find out grammar mistakes.
>
> I am wondering if anyone here uses any grammar checker that is blind friendly?
>
> Thanks Friends,
>
> Osmond
>
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