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.

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A Big Apple Lesson Tara McCarthy, TVI/COMS taragriffis@aol.com Common Core Curriculum is an overwhelming phrase on its own. Coupled with Expanded Core Curriculum, it can make any teacher of the visually impaired feel demoralized and defeated. This year, in speaking with several itinerant teachers across the country, I heard the same question over and over: "With the Expanded Core Curriculum taking precedence, how can I build time into my lessons to address the Expanded Core Curriculum with low vision students?" In writing this article, I hope to alleviate some stress and provide some creative ways for teachers of the visually impaired to utilize applications on the iPad with low vision students in a way that focuses on Expanded Core Curriculum domains while building on the Common Core Curriculum taught by classroom teachers. This school year, my second grade students are reading Charlotte's Web as part of the Common Core Curriculum for ELA. I immediately determined, as their TVI, that in order to address their IEP goals, I needed to find a way to integrate several Expanded Core Curriculum (ECC) areas into their curriculum. The iPad, along with several applications, has proven to be a fabulous bridge between the Core Curriculum and ECC for my students. These are three actual lessons that were used during English Language Arts for second grade students with visual impairments whose IEP mandates were three weekly, forty-five minute sessions. 31

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