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Visually impaired children: Development and implications for education
Authors:Michael J. Tobin  Nick Bozic  Graeme Douglas  John Greaney  Stuart Ross
Affiliation:1. Research Centre for the Education of the Visually Handicapped, University of Birmingham, School of Education, Edgbaston, B15 2TT, Birmingham, U.K.
2. University of West of England, UK
3. Department of Psychology, Nene College, Avenue Campus, NN2 6JD, Northampton, UK
Abstract:This paper examines some of the models used for conceptualizing the possible developmental implications of blindness and severe visual impairment. It takes up the question of the significance in infancy of certain skills and proficiencies, especially motor, that may be impeded by the lack of vision. The paper then addresses such issues for the school age child as access to literacy, with the emphasis being on ways of mitigating the potentially educationally handicapping consequences of visual disability. Educational technology is cited as one of the principal means available to teachers for meeting these challenges, and examples are given of procedures and devices that are being explored. A central argument is that for psychologists, teachers, and educational technologists the search must be to pinpoint the specific and changing needs of the individual learner.
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