Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE Quarterly Volume 59(5)

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/422067

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 14 of 72

; Lorem Ipsum Dolor Spring 2016 3 Orientation and Mobility Specialist taught me how to get to my classes and my interpreter would tell me what she said, during the break in the O & M lesson and upon my request, the interpreter told me what the students were wearing, where they did/did not congregate, and their emotional appearance. Her taking on the role of an intervener, a type of environmental translator, played a critical role later when I began the classes. I had assumed everyone would be wearing dress clothes or business suits. While some did, most did not! I could blend in but use my cane, braille, etc. I could be a deafblind person and be OK! I did. What is my only wish? I wish I could have had that experience a lot sooner. Eduardo I have been profoundly deaf since birth. Though my vision was strong when I was young, it drastically began to diminish when I was fourteen years old. I grew up in California until I moved to Atlanta, Georgia for my education. As I started attending Atlanta Area School for the Deaf (AASD) in Clarkston, GA, I quickly adopted the subtle differences of Georgia's American Sign Language and made some new Deaf friends. By the time I got into the high school, I noticed that I was losing my vision. I squinted to catch a better view of my friends fanning their hands around me. I felt dazed. My counselor noticed my lack of focus and earnestly urged me to go see my eye doctor for an assessment. The day that I visited the eye doctor was the toughest day of my life. It was then that I was diagnosed with Usher Syndrome. I was fourteen years old. At the time of writing this, I cannot see in the darkness or semi-darkness, such as dusk. I have tunnel vision; that is, I can see 15

Articles in this issue

view archives of Division on Visual Impairments - VIDBE Quarterly Volume 59(5)