Baylor prof’s lab making science accessible for the blind & visually impaired
…aggressive pediatric eye cancer, and is now thriving as a teenager despite losing an eye. “When I think about my son and talk to other parents of children with disabilities, what they’ll be doing in their 30s and 40s depends on what we’re doing for them now,” Shaw says. “And most scientists are just too busy to really even care. At Baylor, it’s not that way, and that’s nice. There’s an ethos here.” This year’s visit marked the second year in a row…