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Home > National Agenda for Education > Parent Perspective
A Parent PerspectiveNational Agenda for the Education of Children and Youths with Visual Impairments, Including Those with Multiple Disabilities: A Parent PerspectiveThe National Agenda is a formative grassroots structure that has a made a significant difference in the education system for children who are blind or have low vision, including those with multiple disabilities for the past ten years. As the field of blindness enters the tenth anniversary of this formative national effort with our formative partners of families, teachers, consumers, and the students themselves, it has been a great honor for me to be part of this national effort from the beginning. AFB has played a major role in supporting the efforts of the national agenda and this continues to this day. In 2003, the National Agenda's current eight goals were updated and two new goals were added. The new goals are Goals 9 and 10. For additional resources about the National Agenda, we invite you to go through the AFB's education web page at www.afb.org/education.asp. In addition, we encourage you to review state implementation plans for the national agenda at the web site for the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired at www.tsbvi.edu Mary Ann Siller, M.Ed. What is the National Agenda?The National Agenda for the Education of Children and Youths with Visual Impairments, Including Those with Multiple Disabilities (Corn, Hatlen, Huebner, Ryan, Siller, 1995) is a grassroots effort to change the way visually impaired and blind children are being educated. Even with IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) and FAPE (Free Appropriate Public Education) the fact remains that children with visual impairments do not always learn enough in school to get a job or live independently after graduation. The National Agenda is the result of parents, teachers, and administrators working as partners to make changes for students with visual impairments. These partners have looked at the most important things needed to make education better for visually impaired and blind children. These things make up the eight goals of the National Agenda. We believe that working toward these goals can make a difference in the lives of students with visual impairments. This National Agenda document provides family members with a framework for improving the education system for their children with visual impairments. As a national grassroots effort since 1994, it has provided the necessary platform to positively alter the way children who are blind or have low vision are educated in America's schools. The American Foundation for the Blind's National Education Program believes that working toward the goals of the national agenda will make a difference in the lives of students with visual impairments. Why is the National Agenda important to parents of students with visual impairments or blindness?The National Agenda is important because sometimes months or years go by before someone, usually a parent or teacher, realizes that a child can't see well. More time may go by before the child receives the kinds of services that are needed to learn well. Children with blindness or visual impairments may receive an inferior education because there are not enough teachers and specialists who can meet their special needs. Often children with visual impairments are placed in schools or classrooms that are not right for them, without thought to where the child might learn best. As parents, we believe using the National Agenda will help our children learn what they need to know to be successful. When parents, teachers, and school administrators use the National Agenda and its eight goals, blind and visually impaired children will receive an appropriate education. The ten goals of the National Agenda, followed by questions parents may want to ask themselves, follow. Although some answers are included, ours is not an inclusive list and you and your family may want to consult local resources for additional information. Goal 1: Students and their families will be referred to an appropriate education program within 30 days of identification of a suspected visual impairment. Teachers of students with visual impairments will provide appropriate quality services.
New Parents—If answer is no to either question, you may want to contact your State Department of Special Education Early Intervention Services (EIS)....make a note of the telephone number. Experienced parents—You may want to advocate on behalf of other parents and their children for early intervention services or simply breathe a sigh of relief that you no longer need worry about this point. Goal 2: Policies and procedures will be implemented to ensure the right of all parents to full participation and equal partnership in the education process.
In the formal educational process (i.e., during IEP meetings, transition planning, etc.) equal partnership roles may change as the child gets older—with younger children, parents are more directly involved, with older students, the student becomes the partner). In order to be a full and equal partner in the formal education process, parents must be involved in the entirety of the educational process from initial assessment and planning through implementation and continuing assessment. Goal 3: Universities with a minimum of one full-time faculty member in the area of visual impairments will prepare a sufficient number of teachers and O&M specialists for students with visual impairments to meet personnel needs throughout the country.
You can help address this critical shortage: please contact your state National Agenda Coordinator or state parent organization, addressing the needs of children with visual impairments. Goal 4: Caseloads will be determined based on the assessed needs of students.
Goal 5: Local education programs will ensure that all students have access to a full array of service delivery options.
Goal 6: Assessment of students will be conducted, in collaboration with parents, by personnel having expertise in the education of students with visual impairments.
Assessment includes:
Goal 7: Access to developmental and educational services will include an assurance that instructional materials are available to students in the appropriate media and at the same time as their sighted peers.
You may need to advocate for both textbooks and instructional materials, including assistive technology such as electronic note takers or speech access to the Internet for your child. Goal 8: All educational goals and instruction will address the academic and expanded core curricula based on the assessed needs of each student with visual impairments.
Goal 9: Transition services will address developmental and educational needs (birth through high school) to assist students and their families, in setting goals and implementing strategies through the life continuum commensurate with the student's aptitudes, interests, and abilities.Goal 10: To improve students' learning, service providers will engage in ongoing local, state and national professional development.The critical importance of the expanded core curriculum for students with visual impairmentsThe expanded core curriculum (Hatlen, 1996) is the body of knowledge and skills that are needed by students with visual impairments because of their unique disability-specific needs. Students with visual impairments need the expanded core curriculum (see below) in addition to the core academic curriculum of general education. Core Academic Curriculum
Expanded Core Curriculum
Compensatory or functional academic skills include learning experiences such as concept development and spatial awareness, organizational skills, using braille or low vision devices to read and write, using alternative communication systems such as sign language or the use of calendar systems, using recorded materials, and so forth. Orientation and Mobility training focuses on alternatives to using sight for safe and independent travel purposes. In this instructional area, children are taught the use of the long cane and techniques for using any remaining vision that they may have such as the use of optical devices such as telescopes or monoculars. Social interaction skills must be taught to children with visual impairments because they are unable to casually observe how people interact and socialize with one another. They must be taught when and how to smile, frown, nod, wink, shrug, and the many other nonverbal communication skills. Independent living skills are the chores people perform, according to their abilities, which enable them to manage their homes and personal lives. These chores include grooming, eating and preparing meals, taking care of household chores, money and time management, and so forth. Recreation and leisure skills may include traditional as well as adapted physical education activities. However, as with social interaction skills visually impaired children need help identifying the array of choices available to them in this area and must be taught how to perform leisure skills that most children learn through observation. Career education for students with visual impairments needs to begin as early as possible and include self-awareness and career exploration activities, job seeking skills instruction, information about job keeping, and encourage opportunities for gaining work experience. Instruction in the use and maintenance of assistive technology is needed in the curriculum for students with visual impairments. Assistive technology enables blind and visually students to access and store information from libraries around the world and the Internet. In addition, students with visual impairments can use assistive technology for notetaking, studying for tests, research and a variety of other academic uses. Visual efficiency skills are those skills that children with impaired, but good remaining vision use to make the most use of their remaining sight. Instruction in this area may focus on the use of optical devices such as magnifiers, bioptic aids, telescopes, closed circuit televisions, and so forth. How can the National Agenda impact the lives of you, your family, and your child?Knowledge is power. With the knowledge that parents and professionals from all over the United States developed and support the ten goals of the National Agenda, you can use them as tools when working with your child, in your district, with school administrators, teachers and support staff to guarantee that your child's educational program meets his or her needs. The ten goals of the National Agenda provide guidelines to consider for your child's successful educational outcomes. Some of the goals may not seem related to your child or your situation. However, consider this example. Your child is blind and needs Braille instruction; the district cannot provide a teacher of the visually impaired because although they have advertised, they are having difficulty finding a certified Teacher of the Visually Impaired. Goal 3 is Teacher Preparation; this does affect you, your child and your situation because your child is not receiving services. Perhaps in the larger picture you can affect change for your child by bringing this issue to your state representatives and senators, or your State Board of Education (SBOE). ReferencesCorn, A. L., Hatlen, P., Huebner, K. M., Ryan, F., Siller, M. A. (1995). The national agenda for the education of children and youths with visual impairments, including those with multiple disabilities. NY: American Foundation for the Blind. Hatlen, P. (1996). The core curriculum for blind and visually impaired students, including those with additional disabilities. RE:view 28, 25-32. Acronyms of Interest to ParentsACB-American Council of the Blind ADA-Americans with Disabilities Act AER-Association for Education & Rehabilitation of the Blind and Visually Impaired AFB-American Foundation for the Blind APH-American Printing House for the Blind AT-Assistive Technology CEC-Council for Exceptional Children COMS-Certified O&M Specialist DVR-Division of Vocational Rehabilitation ECI-Early Childhood Intervention FAPE-Free Appropriate Public Education FERPA-Family Educational Rights & Privacy Act IDEA-Individuals with Disabilities Education Act IEP-Individualized Education Program IFSP-Individualized Family Services Plan ILS-Independent Living Skills (AKA ADL & DLS) ISD-Independent School District ITP-Individualized Transition Plan LEA-Local Education Agency LRE-Least Restrictive Environment NAPVI-National Association for Parents of the Visually Impaired NFB-National Federation of the Blind NLS-National Library Service NOPBC-National Organization of Parents of Blind Children O&M-Orientation & Mobility OSEP-Office of Special Education Policy OT-Occupational Therapy P&A-Protection & Advocacy Para-Paraprofessional (aide) PAC-Parent Advisory Council PT-Physical Therapy RFB&D-Recording for the Blind & Dyslexic SEA-State Education Agency S&L-Speech & Language Section 504 SSA-Social Security Administration TCVI-Teacher Consultant for the Visually Impaired (see TVI) TVI-Teacher of the Visually Impaired (see TCVI) VRC-Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor VRT-Vocational Rehabilitation Teacher Resource ListAmerican Council of the Blind (ACB)
American Foundation for the Blind (AFB)
American Printing House for the Blind (APH)
Descriptive Video Service, WGBH (DVS)
Hadley School for the Blind
Helen Keller National Center for Deaf-Blind Youths and Adults
National Association of Parents of the Visually Impaired (NAPVI)
National Federation of the Blind (NFB)
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS)
Recordings for the Blind and Dyslexic, Inc. (RFB&D)
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