Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBEQ.61.4.Fall.2016

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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; Lorem Ipsum Dolor Spring 2016 5 Education. It was my goal to really pinpoint which skills involved vision. This allowed me to see where accommodations and adaptations are needed for students who are blind or visually impaired. After this, I began to look at a Pennsylvanian elementary school science curriculum. This is where I saw a huge problem in accommodations. The expectations and activities in no way accommodated students with visual impairments. I began to adapt the curriculum activities so that students with visual impairments could complete them. For example, a first grade objective is to identify and describe types of fresh and salt-water and the suggested activity is to classify pictures of bodies of water, e.g., fresh and salt. My initial adaptation was to have the student classify tactile images of the different bodies of water. As I continued adapting these activities, I began to realize that there are so many activities that need adaption, because of the visual skills they require. As my research continues and I begin to work in the field of visual impairments, I hope to compile numerous resources that could be used by any teacher of the visually impaired. This will include resources for adaptation, instructions to create materials, and ideas about how to teach a certain topic. I feel that my research, among other research in the STEM area, is just the beginning of finding the best methods of adapting science for 22

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