Home
Help

more tech news on digitalMASS

E-mail to a friend
See what stories users are sending to friends

Latest News
Latest business news
Latest high-tech news

DC Denison web log
Reporter DC Denison spends his life on the 'Net. His daily weblog compiles the best of what he finds.

Market Watch Dow:
9,763.96 (-87.6)
NASDAQ:
1,904.9 (-25.68)
S&P 500:
1,129.9 (-9.55)
More stock quotes

Columnists
Steve Bailey
Boston Capital
Hiawatha Bray
Consumer Beat
Kenneth Hooker
Charles A. Jaffe
Scott Kirsner
David Warsh

Features
Simple Interest
The Globe 100

Links
2001 Globe 100
The Best of Massachusetts Business

Technology
digitalMASS.com

Advertising
ComPile Agency Directory

Sections
Boston Globe Online: Page One
Nation | World
Metro | Region
Business
Sports
Living | Arts
Editorials

Weekly
Health | Science (Tue.)
Food (Wed.)
Calendar (Thu.)
Life at Home (Thu.)

Sunday
Automotive
Focus
Learning
Real Estate
Travel

Local news
City Weekly
Globe South
Globe West
North Weekly
NorthWest Weekly
New Hampshire

Features
Globe archives
Book Reviews
Book Swap
Columns
Comics
Crossword
Horoscopes
Death Notices
Lottery
Movie Reviews
Music Reviews
NetWatch weblog
Obituaries
Special Reports
Today's stories A-Z
TV & Radio
Weather

Classifieds
Autos
BostonWorks
Real Estate
Place an Ad


Buy a Globe photo

Help
Contact the Globe
Send us feedback

Alternative views
Low-graphics version
Acrobat version (.pdf)

Search the Globe:

Today
Yesterday



The Boston Globe OnlineBoston.com
Boston Globe Online / Giving

  
(Globe Staff Photo / John Blanding)

Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic has provided Nicole Tarzia, 19, with books on tape that have allowed her to overcome the obstacles of her disability and excel academically.

W hen I was in elementary school I was put into low-reading groups — you know, the ones every kid dreads to be in — and I always felt like I wasn’t good enough. I felt like giving up. There was no solace for me ”— until Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic stepped in.

Tarzia was diagnosed with cerebal palsy at six months old. Doctors told her parents her intelligence would be low, she’d be wheelchairbound, and she’d never have a normal life. But with the help of Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic, a national nonprofit organization, Tarzia, now 19, has proven them wrong.

“I was a struggling elementary school student, and I graduated high school with a 3.95 grade point average,” she says, laughing.

Now a sophomore at Bridgewater State College, pulling a 4.0 GPA, Tarzia is majoring in both psychology and social work, and after graduation plans to open a clinical practice for children with disabilities.

“I want to be that rock for that child who has no one to turn to,” she says.

Blessed with a fighting spirit, Tarzia says she owes it all to RFBD, which provided her with academic books recorded on cassette tapes.

With a library of over 80,000 recorded books, and more than 250 volunteers throughout the region, RFBD has provided numerous textbooks for both the visually impaired and those with physical and learning disabilities. A service all too often overlooked, RFBD has helped hundreds of thousands nationwide overcome the obstacles of their disabilities and continue their education with remarkable success.

Says Tarzia, “I know how much I’ve struggled and I’ve accomplished, despite my disabilities.”

Megan Tench

This story ran on page F7 of the Boston Globe on 11/18/2001.
© Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company.



  Save 50% on home delivery of The Boston Globe

© Copyright 2001 Boston Globe Electronic Publishing Inc.
| Advertise | Contact us | Privacy policy |