Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q 67.3 Summer Back to School Issue.2022.

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 67 Issue 3 differences in the development of these skills but rather compare students with VI to sighted student normative expectations. This can cause the information produced by these tasks and forms to be irrelevant or even useless for those who wish to support students with VI. At the instructional level, assessment is the first step in understanding an individual student's needs. This article introduces the EF skills and EF assessment tools available, discusses their limitations for students with VI, and poses a process by which teachers can create functional tasks to informally assess the EF of their students with VI as a basis for planning instruction and support. Understanding EF Skills EF is an umbrella term, meaning it includes many skills. Table 1 lists typical skills, their definitions, and examples, that are referred to under the term EF and assessed on the BRIEF- 2 (Gioia et al., 2015), a commonly used rating scale of EF.

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