Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 59(2)

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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of knowledge and skills that provides such a framework for unique disability-specific instruction in skill areas. Consider, for example, a student who is visually impaired that receives explicit instruction in grooming and other self-care connected to the independent living skills component of the ECC. At the same time, this learner is also provided with opportunities to explore his/her strengths and interests while being trained in the use of nonver- bal communication as well as the physical, social, and personal aspects of sexuality. Each area of the ECC is integrated into this student's daily ex- periences. Bringing together all of the skills learned in the ECC can enable the individual who is blind or has low vision to function well and completely in the general community and facili- tate the development of many desirable traits. Table 1 shows how each instructional area of the ECC can relate to particular human mate selec- tion criteria. There are numerous ways ECC- specific instruction can enhance desirable traits such as leadership, employability, and physical attractiveness. The exact match between areas of the ECC and particular human mate selection cri- teria varies based on individual characteristics. We present some of the most fundamental asso- ciations between ECC instruction and human mate selection criteria in Table 1. 42

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