Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q 67.4 Fall 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.

Issue link: http://dvi.uberflip.com/i/1486042

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VIDBE-Q Volume 67 Issue 4 story through her mother's BlogSpot. One day I was attending the Special Olympics at the school where Ivey's brothers attended, and I briefly met Ivey there for the first time in person. A few months later, I was asked to be Ivey's one-on- one paraprofessional for the next school year. Of course I accepted, and was later asked if I would become Ivey's intervener. I completed the Utah State University Intervener Training Program and have since become a Nationally Credentialed Deafblind Intervener Specialist (DBIS). As Ivey's intervener, I have been in several classroom settings. When Ivey was in primary school, she was in a self-contained classroom with non-verbal peers. With Ivey's vision and hearing loss and deafblind-specific needs, we had an area in the classroom dedicated to Ivey that was separate from the other children in the classroom. We essentially had a classroom inside of a classroom, that gave Ivey access to her instructional needs, but limited access to her peers. The teachers had no knowledge of deafblindness or the role of the intervener, and this created tension between the teachers and me at times. When Ivey transitioned to a new school, she was placed in a mild to moderate classroom with verbal peers, and we were welcomed in by Erica McKinney (who is now her case manager). There were many new opportunities for Ivey to interact with peers and teachers. Ivey began flourishing and making friends. At one point, Mrs. McKinney left the classroom, and we were once again

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