Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.70.4.Fall.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 4 a lifetime skill-builder, rather than a temporary high school experience. Recreation and leisure are established as credited courses and are also seamlessly integrated into informal residential life experiences, with ECC instruction embedded across all settings. A key approach at Bridges School is the consistent invitation for students to serve as equitable partners in the learning process. The faculty implements a deeper learning approach to the ECC, which goes beyond memorization to emphasize critical thinking, problem solving, collaboration, and real-world application. This method prioritizes the development of transferable skills, creativity, and lifelong learning habits, and places strong emphasis on learning how to learn, not just what to learn. Student voice, self-direction, and meaningful engagement are encouraged at every step. Roles for faculty and staff are explicitly communicated to students, enabling them to understand and fulfill their own responsibilities within the learning community. Students are regularly coached to ask themselves, "What's my role in this?" and "What do I need to meet my personal vision needs and learning profile?" While the physical education teacher may plan the lesson, students are expected to actively connect the skills learned to various situations and to integrate 53

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