Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ 69.4 Fall 2024

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 69 Issue 4 in accessibility tools (on a computer) into two separate categories for built-in (computer) screen readers and built-in (computer) screen magnification. Participants were asked to select all the methods they used to learn how to utilize the work AT they identified in Survey 2. Response options were: a) in school (by a TSVI), b) training provided through a vocational rehabilitation (VR) agency or agency for the blind, c) vendor who sold the technology, d) self-taught, e) tutorials, f) another person with blindness or low vision taught me/demonstrated, and g) other. Participants were then asked to identify which of the selected methods they considered the primary method used to learn each specific AT. This data was used to address research question 2. Some participants who completed Survey 1 did not complete Survey 2, resulting in a smaller sample size (N=105) for the learning methods variables. To measure self-perceived skill level (research question 3), participants rated their skill level for each AT they reported using at work in Survey 1, using a scale from 1 (beginner) to 10 (advanced). To measure need for training on workplace AT (research question 4), participants who rated their workplace AT skill as 7 or lower were asked whether they would benefit from more training on that particular AT (yes/no).

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