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

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 98 of 173

VIDBE-Q Volume 67 Issue 4 kicking. She lived her life at the mercy of others, with no idea of what was happening, where she was, or why she was there. She needed a way to communicate. I immediately started exposing Daisy to tactile sign language and worked with the vision teacher to create 12 tactile symbols to indicate destinations around the school. Within a few days, Daisy knew what each symbol represented, and she started to bring symbols to me to ask to go places. For the first time in her life, she had some control and structure to her day. Daisy continued to make strides in communication and started signing independently without modeling or prompting. She needed a fulltime intervener who was fluent in sign language and I requested that intervener services be added to her IEP. Instead of hiring another intervener, however, both students with deafblindness were placed in the same classroom with the expectation that I would work with both of them at the same time. Daisy needed constant access through tactile sign language which only I could provide. This put me in an impossible situation. Realizing they would need to hire multiple interveners, the administration had the classroom teacher remove "intervener services" from both of the students' IEPs. At the end of the school year, when both students lost intervener services, their access, and their voices. It was 4 years before the school district would post

Articles in this issue

view archives of Division on Visual Impairments - VIDBE-Q 67.4 Fall 2022