Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.Winter.2026.Voume 71.Issue 1

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 2026 Volume 71 Issue 1 In addition to accommodating age and personality differences, I teach a wide variety of skills, depending on each student's abilities and goals. On a given day, I may teach braille literacy and assistive technology to one student, and visual efficiency skills to another. I may also instruct a student in how to analyze busy intersections and safely cross streets along a new route. Along with teaching, I am constantly collaborating with classroom teachers, special education teachers, and other service providers to help students access their curriculum, meet their goals, and determine next steps. Through my experience of teaching and collaboration, I have learned that while each student prepares me for future students, I cannot simply assume that a previous strategy will work again. Rather, the students' unique needs and circumstances present constant challenges. I try to learn from these challenges and identify adjustments that I can make to help students succeed. I may combine techniques used with previous students or seek an entirely different approach. Despite my years of experience, it is still common for me to initially feel unprepared when encountering a new student and determining which strategies to use. One of my most memorable experiences of feeling unprepared began when I received an 11 th grade student who had been diagnosed with papilledema (optic 43

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