Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.68.4.Fall.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 4 19 how I would accomplish this, and I did not know anything about accessible books or braille, but I was going to figure it out. I was going to make books for him and get books into his little hands once more. Thus began my accessible literacy journey. The Beginning At the time, I checked online, and I could not find a lot of information or ideas on how to create books for young blind children. I was not quite sure what to do but the ideas soon started flowing. I started by finding empty cardboard scrapbooking type books at local crafting stores. I would glue tactile shapes and objects onto the pages. I would purchase already made children's board books that had tactile "touch and feel" pieces on them already. Anything I could think of. I tried to make the books interactive (have pieces you can turn, slide, or flip) and teach little lessons (shapes, counting, positioning, and language). I asked his TSVI if he could help me with the braille for my first set of homemade tactile braille books. I would give him a list of words/sentences to braille on and he graciously and happily provided them on label paper for me. I would stick them onto Liam's new books. Liam did not know braille yet and neither did I! But I was determined he would be a braille reader, and I wanted him exposed to braille and wanted to create a braille rich environment for him. His TSVI shared a few resources I could use to teach myself braille as a starting point, and eventually he taught a

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