Division on Visual Impairments

VIDBE-Q.63.2.Spring.2018

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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33 VIDBE-Q Volume 63 Issue 2 sensitivity. Discrimination in the somatic system can be utilized for communication by the nonverbal community. This is known as Haptic Perception, or a person's ability to identify an object's properties using the sense of touch (Bushnell & Boudreau, 1998). Through our work with students with visual impairments, we utilize the somatic system for a variety of things such as reading Braille, communicating with object cards, creating tactile pictures, etc. For students with visual impairments, this is often the most available body system for them to use which usually makes it the most successful. The Olfactory system uses chemical receptors in the nose that responds to airborne chemicals making the human sense of smell (Faure & Richardson, 2002). At first, this sense does not appear to aid in the student's ability to express wants or needs. However, it does have major implications for scheduling and cue systems. This aids in the prevention of anticipation reactions. At Overbrook School for the Blind in Philadelphia, a teacher was observed using jars with specific scents to identify the days of the week with students who had multiple disabilities and were nonverbal. During circle time, when children were asked to identify the day of the week, those nonverbal students with severe disabilities would be presented with a jar with a distinct scent. It was used to communicate to students what to expect. This was a big step in our research of communicating with body systems. These students had limited use of their somatic system, vision, and overall cognitive functioning. At Overbrook, they utilized the body system that was of best use to them to communicate. The Auditory system is the way sound is transmitted through the ear and to the brain for interpretation. Hearing functions are primitive, such as awareness of biological sounds like breathing, signal warning, such as the ability to monitor your environment,

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