4 Fun Summer Activities for Students with Visual Impairments and Multiple Disabilities
Ideas for fun summer activities for children with multiple disabilities, including visual impairment
Ideas for fun summer activities for children with multiple disabilities, including visual impairment
Find out how to make worksheets accessible and fun for young braille readers
A graduate of Florida School for the Deaf and Blind shares her experience of her days as a student there.
Parents of children who are blind, visually impaired or deafblind can do a lot to promote the development of prebraille skills with their children at home.
Getting started using tactile symbols to support communication with students who have low vision and are non-verbal.
Learning what ingredients are in the food we eat, as well as becoming more independent with cooking skills, are critical skills for young children who are blind or visually impaired.
This story of a young Turkish girl who is blind with additional disabilities tells about the journey from her premature birth to learning braille.
A mother from the Philippines shares the story of her daughter’s progress from a young child with MDVI (multiple disabilities and visual impairment) to a young adult who is learning to be independent in the world.
With school closings due to the coronavirus and COVID-19, many parents are scrambling to put something into place at home.
These PowerPoint books can be used for instruction in Orientation and Mobility with younger students during this time of at-home learning. They can also help to raise awareness among families about O & M.