two hands using Quick Pick Cards with case and picker

Quick Pick Braille Contractions UEB

by American Printing House for the Blind

$175.21

Professional guidance helps The mechanical game mechanism is simple and self-correcting, requiring no setup or power. However, selecting appropriate cards and integrating this into a braille literacy curriculum meaningfully benefits from a TVI's guidance — they'll know which contractions to target and when, and can sequence practice within the student's broader UEB learning progression.

Last verified June 15, 2026 · classified May 23, 2026

What it is

Summary

AI-generated from vendor-published content · May 23, 2026

A tactile card game that drills braille contraction recognition using a self-correcting mechanical format — the student inserts a wooden stylus into one of four answer holes, and the card releases only if they chose correctly. It's designed for braille learners who need repeated practice with UEB contractions, particularly students working through the full contraction set in a classroom or home setting. The set includes two cases of 50 cards each, covering a broad cross-section of contractions, so it functions as a complete standalone practice tool with no screen or device required. The mechanical feedback makes it genuinely self-directed — students know immediately if they're right without needing a teacher present, though a teacher of the visually impaired (TVI) would typically integrate it into a structured braille literacy curriculum rather than handing it to a student cold.

Quick Facts Catalog facts · auto-generated
Age range
ComplexityProfessional guidance helps
Price$175.21
Funding
  • AT Act lending
  • Out of pocket
  • School district
  • Vocational rehab
VerifiedJune 15, 2026
ClassifiedMay 23, 2026 · confidence: high

What Setup Looks Like

  • Out of the box
    1. Insert a card into the case — the question is readable in braille while the card remains seated.
    2. Use the wooden tool to select one of the four answer holes; a correct answer releases the card.
  • With professional help
    1. A Teacher of the Visually Impaired (TVI) should determine appropriate placement in the UEB contraction sequence before introducing specific card sets.
    2. Expect the TVI to preview cards and sequence practice sessions aligned with the student's IEP braille literacy goals.

Getting it

Try Before You Buy

Devices like this are often available to borrow through your state's AT Act program — typically free or low-cost — so you can try it before buying or pursuing funding.

Where to Get It

aph Visit
$175.21

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How to Fund This

Equipment like this is often pursued through official state programs. These are common starting points — each program decides its own eligibility and what it covers, so the first step is always a phone call.

All funding programs, state by state →

Sources & fine print

Vendor facts (name, price, platforms, vendor link) sourced from American Printing House for the Blindview on vendor site; last verified June 15, 2026.

Classification & description AI-generated from vendor-published content on May 23, 2026 · confidence: high. Vendor specs may lag; verify before relying on details in a clinical or funding artifact.