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.

Issue link: http://dvi.uberflip.com/i/258820

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 46 of 69

ceive positive messages and develop trust about who they are from how they are held, touched, fed, changed and spoken to (Hock, 2010). New parents may be grieving the loss of their "perfect child" which may lead to decreased touching, cuddling, and handling of the infant who is blind. Ages of 3 to 4 years Toddlers become more curious about their bodies and they may masturbate (a normal activ- ity for all children). These are not the same 'sexual' responses that adults associate with masturbation – children are comforted by repeti- tion, such as sucking their thumbs. Parents should define two sets of words: 1) appropriate or inappropriate, and 2) public or private (Hock, 2010). Appropriateness is not whether a situation is right or wrong, but whether or not the behavior matches the situation. Public is defined as any place where people can or may see you. Private is any place where no one can see you and there is little or no chance of being seen. If a child who is blind cannot see others' behaviors, the child may assume that others cannot see their own be- haviors. For example, masturbation is appropriate and private in a bedroom versus the living room or a preschool class. During this stage, children establish for them- selves that they are boys or girls. They are in- quisitive about body differences and may play "doctor" or "house" (Hock, 2010). Parents should begin using appropriate sexual vocabulary to name body parts so that a child who is blind will not believe that these parts are not to be men- tioned or are somehow unacceptable. Additionally, parents should explain that no one touches a child's "private parts" unless for health reasons or cleaning. Some children who are blind may become more passive if they rely on adults solely and may be reluctant to protect themselves from inappropriate behavior from 47

Articles in this issue

view archives of Division on Visual Impairments - DVI Quarterly Volume 59(2)