Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.68.1.Winter.2023

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 68 Issue 1 students in special education (Hamayan et al., 2023). Henceforth, you likely have at least one student on your caseload who appears to lack or lacks English language proficiency. As an English language learner, I always start by laying the groundwork for my learning. I regularly utilize this technique when I teach future TVIs at Florida State University. We begin by defining terminology that starts with dissecting words to their roots, origins, and meaning. In essence, we lay the foundation to learn a new concept by tying it to prior understanding when possible. As vision professionals, you work with a heterogenous population across ages, disabilities, placements, and for the sake of this article and upcoming presentations, languages spoken by clients. First, it is necessary to distinguish between Dual Language Learners (DLLs) and English Language Learners (ELLs). At first glance, the designations may seem to refer to an identical idea, yet they are different. Dual Language Learners, or DLLs, are students simultaneously learning English and their home language prior to entering Kindergarten (Li et al., 2010). These are the students who we encounter while providing early intervention services to families or who may enter preschools to receive special education services. Their learning is ongoing, as they are connecting words to objects, subjects, and experiences. An English language learner or ELL has developed the foundations of at least oral communication in their home language. Li and colleagues (2010) characterize this population by the challenges of learning the ins and outs of academic English while keeping up with all their peers in content learning (e.g., reading, mathematics, and science). Students are expected to understand and learn what is being taught at grade level while simultaneously producing acceptable oral and written work in English (Li et al., 2010). Some federal precedents and laws make provisions to ensure that multilingual students

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