Experiencing success
OVERVIEW
At Children’s Center for the Visually Impaired, students receive an inclusive, supportive, and personalized approach to preschool. At the state-of-the-art Children’s Center Campus, located in downtown Kansas City, individuals with visual impairments are able to explore the environment as a safe replica of the sighted world. This experiential learning becomes a viable method for growth and development. Textured, purposeful indictors on the walls are used to identify landmarks and the strategically differing ceiling heights allow for auditory cues to be used in the building.
However, the real magic comes from the people who work inside. A staff consisting of Teachers of the Visually Impaired (TVIs) with certifications in common diagnoses, a full-time nursing staff, and a supportive administration team all work together to provide more than just preschool; they foster an institute of creativity and growth. Working closely with the therapy and specialized services program, preschool students may receive services in physical and occupational therapy, speech and language pathology, as well as orientation and mobility, braille, and aquatic therapy, depending on the needs of the child.
Expanded Core Curriculum
assistive technology
Students at CCVI will be well-versed in the assistive technology that meets their needs. Examples of assistive technology include Augmentative and Alternative Communication devices (AACs), Braille writers, low vision aids, and more.
Career Education
To prepare for future careers, students are asked to participate in tasks throughout the classroom. These assignments can include choosing a job at circle time, helping a teaching assistant with a project, or recognizing and identifying the status of tasks that they must complete before the day is over.
Compensatory Skills
These skills are specific to individuals with visual impairments. In order to compensate for low vision, students are taught different techniques that will help them avoid common pitfalls that the sighted world holds. These skills can include Braille instruction, learning to use tactile graphics, or identifying landmarks.
Independent Living Skills
The goal of many CCVI students is to eventually live independently in adulthood. Therefore, the Preschool Program integrates lessons that directly relate to that mission. Some of these skills relate to meals, whether the task is feeding oneself or cleaning up the table. Other tasks relate to sanitary goals, such as restrooms and hand-washing.
Orientation and Mobility
Orientation and Mobility is provided as a specialized vision impairment service at CCVI. This art form of education is used to assist individuals in navigating their environment safely. Often at CCVI, children use a cane or other mobility device based on the recommendations of a professional. They also strive to learn directional and positional concepts.
Recreation and Leisure
CCVI would not appropriately educate children if it didn’t allow for childlike play and wonder. Recreation and Leisure are a core value and teachers use activities, such as choosing toys to play with or learning game rules, to provide the opportunity for growth.
Self-Determination
As an organization that serves children with multiple disabilities, CCVI understands the importance of advocacy. That is why self determination is a crucial principle our teachers instill in our students. This comes in the form of making choices about routines and activities. Students can provide feedback to their instructors about how they are feeling in a safe environment with mutual respect. This helps create confidence.
Sensory Efficiency
Many students come to CCVI will strong reactions to foreign textures or sensory clues. Therefore, CCVI instructors integrate activities to make their senses as efficient as possible. They try to maximize the use of residual vision, develop hearing, and encourage confident touch.
Social Interaction
Interacting with other preschoolers is essential to CCVI’s learning environment. This school serves to prepare a child for the rest of their life, which will include peers at all stages. Getting along is an important part of growing up. At CCVI, children learn to share with friends, orient to speakers, and engage in meaningful conversations.
Educators
Every lesson plan is composed and communicated by Teachers of the Visually Impaired (TVIs) who specialize in developing goals that address necessary skills to prepare a child for their educational future. These lesson plans include purposeful accommodations—whether that involves adapting materials to large print or braille, eliminating visual or auditory clutter, addressing augmentative communication needs, or incorporating special seating requirements.
classroom
Classes at Children’s Center for the Visually Impaired are designed to enhance essential skills and learn new behaviors that a child will carry into their next educational environment. 2-year-old children are able to attend CCVI 2 half days per week. Students older than 2 are able to attend for 4 half days or up to 5 full days depending on their needs. Individual Educational Programs determine the attendance for each student.
experiences
Children’s Center for the Visually Impaired values worldly experiences as a critical part of a child’s developmental education. Therefore, real-life learning opportunities hold a role in the core curriculum. At CCVI, field trips, community-based learning, and off-campus lessons give each student a wealth of knowledge about the world around them and help provide navigational techniques that they will carry throughout their lives.
Experiential Learning
CCVI Preschool Program students often take field trips into the community to experience the world around them and learn from it.
Some of the field trips in the past have included:
Apple Orchard
Pumpkin Patch
Horseback Riding
KinderConcert at Kauffman Center*
Kansas City Zoo
Bowling
Ice Skating
Deanna Rose Farm
KC Symphony Visit
Planting in the Sensory Garden
White Cane Safety Day
Streetcar Rides
*KinderConcert at Kauffman Center pictured here
Sighted Peer Program
Overview
While CCVI has teachers specifically trained to educate students with visual impairments, some of the most valuable lessons can only come from peers. How do CCVI students learn to share crayons? Who learns at their pace how to perfect the shape of the letters in their names? During playtime, the imagination that it takes to have tea parties in England and ride horses in the Wild West can only come from a child. The Sighted Peer Program provides students with that opportunity.
Children without visual impairments are incorporated into classrooms depending on the ratio and availability. This allows the space to transform from a class into a community where every student contributes their unique skills and talents.
All children learn from one another and can identify similarities and differences. CCVI’s Sighted Peer Program is just one other way to ensure visual impairment or any other differing abilities do not become a barrier to friendship and progress.
CVI Endorsed from Perkins School for the Blind
One of the most common diagnoses at CCVI is Cortical Visual Impairment (CVI).
CVI is a temporary or permanent visual impairment caused by the disturbance of the posterior visual pathways and/or the occipital lobes of the brain. The degree of vision impairment can range from mild to severe. The degree of neurological damage and visual impairment depends upon the time of onset, as well as the location and intensity of the insult. It is a condition that indicates that the visual systems of the brain do not consistently understand or interpret what the eyes see.
Many CCVI teachers and therapists are officially endorsed from Perkins School for the Blind in CVI. They are provided with training and other resources to understand the complexities and variants of the condition and how it impacts learning at a preschool age.