Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 58(4)

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.

Issue link: http://dvi.uberflip.com/i/231984

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Why Why would a group of professionals want to have a conversation about its work on a social networking site? Couldn't those conversations be carried out through e-mail lists, phone calls, or inperson conversations? And why use Twitter as opposed to other, more popular networks like Facebook? Twitter's greatest asset is that it is public—a characteristic you may have previously seen as a disadvantage. We know that one of the greatest challenges we face in the field of blindness is the lack of information the general public has about the work that we do and about the needs of the children and adults we serve. The public forum of Twitter affords us the opportunity to learn from our colleagues around the country while simultaneously raising awareness and educating the public. Additionally, we can engage professionals outside of our field in relevant conversations. For example, if we are having a conversation about blind and low-vision students who had additional disabilities, it would be advantageous to have special educators and related service professionals join the conversation. Through Twitter, we can engage professionals in those fields even if we are not personally connected to them. Twitter is also free, searchable, accessible, archivable, quick, and hip! Anyone with an Internet connection and an average level of technology literacy can access Twitter. You can even access and search for information on Twitter without creating an account! Messages sent through Twitter are limited to one hundred and forty characters, so they take mere seconds to compose. Plus, our students and the young pre-service teachers, who we are trying to convince to pursue a career in our field, will think we are cool when we tell them we are tweeting! 19

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