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 happy engaging lives can be achieved, and that they can then be full of hope for their future. The establishment and maintenance of this Center has been made possible through the Texas Deafblind Multiply Disabled (DBMD) Medicaid Waiver, and this provides the ongoing financing needed to sustain the Center as an operating business. (See section titled Advocacy at National & State levels.) We need more of these day activity centers around the state and the nation for those who are deafblind once they have aged out of the school system. Parents shouldn't have to worry about having to quit their jobs to care for their adult children, and they should have the comfort of knowing that their children are engaged in the community and have richer lives. Sally & Mike Prouty, Minnesota Our son was born with CHARGE Syndrome in the early1980's, and soon after his birth he was diagnosed as deafblind. We learned of the intervener concept from Canadian educators, and became strong proponents of the concept in the United States. We moved to access an intervener program when our son was a toddler. We also hired college students to work as interveners with him during summer vacations. The intervener concept was an obvious solution to provide our son with access to learning. More than forty years later, it's astounding that children who are deafblind today do not automatically have access to interveners.

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