Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.70.1.Winter.2025

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 2025 Volume 70 Issue 1 service providers, allowing itinerant educators to feel more supported (AOTA, APTA, ASHA, 2014). Recommendations To ensure that students with visual impairments receive a free, appropriate public education, TSVIs and O&M specialists must engage in regular workload analysis with their administrator(s). The number of students served by each TSVI and/or O&M specialist may vary based on the workload analysis results. An effective workload analysis should address the following. ● Ensuring a manageable, equitable workload begins by accurately determining student needs using a caseload analysis (Sapp et al., 2013; Toelle & Blankenship, 2008). TSVIs and O&M specialists should use the student's most recent evaluation results to determine student strengths, needs, and service times. This information should be explicitly reflected in the student's IFSP or IEP. ● When calculating student service time, TSVIs and O&M specialists should consider their full scope of practice (e.g., direct instruction, collaborative consultation, preparation, etc). TSVIs and O&M specialists should use objective tools with evidence of reliability and validity based on student need (i.e., Visual Impairment Scale of Service Intensity of Texas (VISSIT) (Pogrund et al., 2019) and O&M VISSIT (Pogrund et al., in press), Vision

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