Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q 65.4 Fall 2020

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.

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VIDBE-Q Volume 65 Issue 4 Hatlen, the instructor of one of my courses, drew two large rectangles on the blackboard and asked students in the class to identify the subject areas taught in school. As we listed various subjects—reading/language arts, mathematics, social studies, science, music, art—he filled the first rectangle. He then had us go through the areas of instruction for which children with visual impairments might need specific, targeted instruction, based on what we had learned in our coursework. Social skills, independent living skills, orientation and mobility, career education, concept development, sensory motor activities, and communication skills were among our replies. The question asked, but left unanswered, was: how to "fit" all of what children who are visually impaired need to learn into the 18 to 21 years of pre-adult development? Although that answer remains elusive, the field of services to students with visual impairments has changed since the time of that exercise in a classroom so long ago. There is now broad acceptance that students with visual impairments do indeed have educational needs that cannot be met in general education classrooms and that these students must be provided with individualized, targeted instruction in key areas necessary for adult success: skills related to compensatory access, assistive technology, sensory efficiency, orientation and mobility, independent living, social interaction, recreation and leisure, career education, and self- determination. First referred to as unique, or disability-specific, needs (Hatlen &

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