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 align with students' areas of need. My assessments have consistently found gaping holes in the students' direct experiences in real world areas of the ECC, especially recreation and leisure, social skills, and independent living skills. Most students have never built nor had any experience with catapults, so our journey starts there. The challenge begins as the students research, build, and intricately model the projectiles' motion graphically and algebraically. At the beginning, students research and read about the history of catapults. (Yes, gore is included as we practice braille and literacy.) I present the students with models for them to explore, but we depart the classroom to delve into recreation and leisure activities. Exiting the classroom is necessary since many of the students do not understand the path the ball takes once it leaves their hands. We become scientists, and we test our hypothesis. Our lab becomes the gym in which we shoot hoops and throw baseballs. We practice on our form with the physical education teacher and work on throwing the farthest distance. As we practice, we record our throws so we can access the data later. When we return to the classroom, the sport connection fuels their understanding of this abstract concept, and their sighs turn into glee as they watch and tactually explore models of their expert launching skills. Beyond the parabolic path, the physical action involving recreation and leisure fosters growth in this math concept, but it also provides opportunities to explore, fail, and persevere. In one particular class, the learning process was

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