Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 58(3)

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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the schools; light is provided by oil lamps or not at all. The two schools for the blind in the capital city of Freetown do have generators, which give them the ability to have power and computer access more regularly. Water is provided by a well at each of the schools. The girls have the primary responsibility of carrying large buckets of water (on their heads, of course) to the cooking huts each day where one meal of rice, beans, and some type of sauce is prepared. What would you provide or try to accomplish at a school in a third-world country where no materials exist and living quarters are grimy and cramped? Koinadugu District, northern Sierra Leone: we've put an emphasis on building relationships and have learned to involve the teachers/administrators in the process of deciding the needs for their schools. We've worked with the Kabala School for the Blind assisting with medical and nutritional needs as well as providing equipment for the students and teachers. Cheryl, in 2012, arranged for five children to have cataract surgery and traveled with the kids to the eye hospital to help take care of them post-surgery. Those kids were so happy to see her this year; they'll be forever changed because of her careful attention to them last summer. Basic teaching materials and Braille books have been delivered and received with enthusiasm at the Kabala school and we are happy to report that 17 braille writers are in their inventory, many of which were purchased or donated by TVIs in Colorado along with numerous folding canes! A beautiful dormitory has been 19

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