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 and conceptual synthesis across topics) and depth of understanding within a subject area contributes to overall reading comprehension. Language and Literacy and Students with Visual Impairment and Blindness Research regarding the language skills of young children with visual impairments shows that semantic and syntactical knowledge develops with similar patterns as children who are sighted (Vervloed et al., 2014). Although a slight delay in learning vocabulary may initially occur, children with visual impairments generally acquire the same number of words in early childhood as children with vision (Dimcovic & Tobin, 1995). One observation in vocabulary use is that children with visual impairments may name things within their immediate environment or use close-by words, as opposed to far-away words or distal words that are not readily accessible to one's experiences (Linders, 1998 as cited in Vervloed et al., 2014). Names of family members and objects within the house, for example, were some of the earliest words learned by children with visual impairments in one study's findings (Brambring, 2007). Brambring's research further documented slight delays in early sound production and use of pronouns, but no delays in word acquisition, phrases, or syntax. Research regarding older children with visual impairments shows greater discrepancies in broad content vocabulary and deep word knowledge, compared with sighted peers (Vervloed et al., 2014). Furthermore, children with visual impairments may have difficulty

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