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.

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VIDBE-Q Volume 67 Issue 4 credentialed. This has been a very successful and key piece to the quality of our services. An important part of our service is the collection of child outcome data. The three students on our caseload who have had intervener services the longest have shown the most significant progress. Child outcomes are measured based on daily intervener service logs and data collection on student progress. Much of the data focuses on communication/language levels, class participation, number of prompts needed, level of independence, and IEP goal progress. Some data can be customized to a student's specific goals in order to explicitly demonstrate their growth to their IEP teams. All of the students we have served have shown some level of progress in their receptive and expressive language development. In April of 2018, we began serving a four-year old student who had very minimal language. The student verbally communicated simple words with prompting such as "Hi," "No," and, "All done," and always referred to himself in the third person. Spelling his name was very challenging for him. The student had just begun learning to tactilely read the braille letters G, L and A. After four years of consistent intervener services, this student currently aces every spelling test he types out in braille, reads full books using his CCTV, correctly speaks in first person, and has turned out to be quite a chatty young boy. Because this student has had full access to his environment and curriculum with the support of an

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