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Special Education Chapter 12: Students with Vision Impairments | Exam Review, Study Guide & Verified Q&A PDF | Inclusive Education & Visual Disabilities

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Special Education Chapter 12: Students with Vision Impairments | Exam Review, Study Guide & Verified Q&A PDF | Inclusive Education & Visual Disabilities

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[[2026]]Page 1 of 20 !! Special Education Chapter 12 Students with Vision
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Education Chapter 12 Students with Vision Impairments




Special Education Chapter 12 Students
with Vision Impairments


Louis Braille (1809-1852)

Invented a printing system for the blind that consists of dots.




Braille

A system of writing that uses raised dots which are read by the fingertips of a blind person.




1832

New England Asylum for The Blind (now Perkins School for The Blind) opens.




Samuel Gridley Howe (1801-1876)

Founder of the first American school for the blind students.




Howe developed these 3 principles principles:

-Pay attention to each student's individual's needs;

-Provide a curriculum similar to that for sighted students;

-Expect students to integrate into their communities.




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Education Chapter 12 Students with Vision Impairments




1900

First part-time class for students with visual impairments established on an experimental basis in the
Chicago Public Schools.




Characteristics of these new classes:

-Students spend most of the day in general ed classes & received instruction in braille & typing from a
special teacher,

-Were designed specifically for students with low vision who weren't blind;

-The intent was to rely on oral instruction as a means of preserving their residual sight, an approach
referred to as sight saving.




Sight saving

The intent was to rely on oral instruction as a means of preserving their residual sight.




1950's

Significant change came in this decade when a dramatic increase occurred in the number of babies who
were visually impaired because of a condition called retrolental fibroplasia (RLF).




Retrolental fibroplasia

-Blindness in newborn infants,

-Oxygen poisoning from incubators of premature babies,

-Complete or near complete blindness.




Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP)

-A condition resulting from administration of an excessive concentration of oxygen at birth;




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Education Chapter 12 Students with Vision Impairments




-Causes scar tissue to form behind the lens of the eye.




Other historical developments

2.




1st historical development

-A radical shift in the methods used to teach students who were partially sighted,

-In contrast to the earlier practice of sight saving for these students, research indicated that using
residual vision could actually improve visual efficiency, & so sight-saving classes were disbanded in favor
of programs that emphasized using available vision.




2nd historical development

-A sudden increase in the number of students with visual impairments who had additional disabilities--
the result of a rubella epidemic in 1964 & 1965 that left 30,000 infants born with deaf-blindness & other
health conditions,

-Advancements in medical interventions for premature infants has increased their survival rate
dramatically, but these infants often have multiple disabilities, including visual impairments,

-Today, it's estimated that half/more of students with visual impairments have additional disabilities.




Visual Impairment (VI)

An impairment (including blindness) in vision that, even with correction, may adversely affect a
student's educational performance.




2 subcategories of visual impairments:

-Low vision,

-Blindness.




Special Education Chapter 12 Students withSpecial
Vision Impairments.pdf
Education Chapter 12 Students with Vision Impairments.pdf Page 3

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