Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q 64.3 Summer 2019

A quarterly newsletter from the Council for Exceptional Children's Division on Visual Impairments containing practitioner tips for Teachers of Students with Visual Impairments, Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and other professionals.

Issue link: http://dvi.uberflip.com/i/1158233

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10 VIDBE-Q Volume 64 Issue 3 are often flush with questions, but finding answers to those questions can be difficult. The Council of Exceptional Children (CEC) has helped connect me to a nation-wide network of professionals in our field, from teachers to researchers. This resource has been valuable in my own efforts to problem-solve supports for students and seek answers. The connections I have made along my journey, from Peace Corps service, to the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), to doctoral work at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), have informed my professional interests and have helped pave my career, to date. I am thankful for the chance to share with the VIDBE-Q readers some of the experiences and relationships that have shaped me as a teacher and now as a researcher. It was a chance meeting that brought me to working with students with visual impairments. My undergraduate degree is in Egyptian Archaeology. To me, archaeology met that need to answer questions. I loved studying archaeology and working in museums, but as I approached graduation, I knew that it was not what I wanted to do with the rest of my life. So, I joined the US Peace Corps and found myself headed to the Kyrgyz Republic. While primarily based in a small village teaching English, working on a side project introduced me to Elnura Emilkanova and the Osh Special Boarding School for the Blind. I did not realize then that those early

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