Fitting in or Feeling Excluded: The Experiences of High School Students with Visual Impairments

2018 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenda Jessup ◽  
Anita C. Bundy ◽  
Alex Broom ◽  
Nicola Hancock

Introduction This study compares the experiences of high school students with visual impairments (that is, those who are blind or have low vision) in and out of school. Methods Twelve visually impaired high school students completed the same in-the-moment survey seven times daily for seven consecutive days. The frequencies of their activities, interactions, and ratings of internal variables (fitting in, acceptance, loneliness, and enjoyment) were compared across three contexts: home, school, and other (neither home nor school) contexts. Results Participants spent much of their time out of school alone at home. They rated leisure and structured recreation in “other” locations as their most enjoyable activities. Doing nothing at school was the least positively rated activity. Participants fitted in significantly less and felt significantly less accepted at school than elsewhere. A large proportion of school interactions involved receiving help; few involved giving help. Participants with additional disabilities reported more school social challenges than their peers who were only visually impaired. Discussion and implications for practitioners This study highlights the subjective dimensions of choice in everyday life. The social impact of doing nothing at school provides an imperative for staff members to ensure that adolescents with visual impairments can participate in lessons. Staff may also need to facilitate opportunities for these students to reciprocate with peers. Adolescents with visual impairments highly value activities with friends out of home and, as with most adolescents, may need to lean on their families for assistance in this area until they can participate in such activities independently.

1997 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.W. McBroom

This study of the transition experiences of 102 college students with visual impairments (including students who are blind and students with low vision) and of the services offered for students with disabilities at 66 colleges found that the colleges provided most of the services students need to be successful. The students also described the numerous areas for which visually impaired high school students should prepare before they enter college and the skills they should develop or hone.


2017 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenda Jessup ◽  
Anita C. Bundy ◽  
Alex Broom ◽  
Nicola Hancock

Introduction This study explores the social experiences in high school of students with visual impairments. Methods Experience sampling methodology was used to examine (a) how socially included students with visual impairments feel, (b) the internal qualities of their activities, and (c) the factors that influence a sense of inclusion. Twelve students, including three with additional disabilities, completed the Psychological Sense of School Membership (PSSM) questionnaire as a measure of inclusion. They were subsequently asked to complete an in-the-moment survey seven times daily for one week using an iOS device. This survey asked about activities and ratings of internal variables: fitting in, acceptance, loneliness, awareness, and enjoyment. Each student was also interviewed. Z-scores were created for internal variables and correlations calculated to examine relationships between experiences, PSSM, and demographic variables. Results This group felt included as measured by the PSSM ( m = 4.24, SD = .67). Students’ most frequent activity was classwork. Doing nothing rated most negatively and was described as time wasting. Out-of-class activities were rated most positively. In the three participants with additional disabilities, it appeared that the presence of this additional disability negatively influenced a sense of inclusion ( rb = -.67, p ≤ .05), fitting in ( rb = -.86, p ≤ .05), enjoyment ( rb = -.65, p ≤ .05), and loneliness ( rb = .88, p ≤ .05). Interviews revealed a lack of common ground between adolescents with both visual impairments and additional disabilities and their peers. Discussion and implications for practitioners These students worked hard to maintain parity with peers and found school more enjoyable if they fit in. It is important to provide discreet and timely access to the curriculum. Friendships require time, common interests, and reciprocity. There may be potential to further explore out-of-class clubs as a means of supporting friendship development. In addition, findings suggest that students with additional disabilities are not likely to feel included. Because this population comprises the majority of visually impaired students, this result has serious implications for practitioners and should be examined in future research.


1979 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 139-144
Author(s):  
Cheri L. Florance ◽  
Judith O’Keefe

A modification of the Paired-Stimuli Parent Program (Florance, 1977) was adapted for the treatment of articulatory errors of visually handicapped children. Blind high school students served as clinical aides. A discussion of treatment methodology, and the results of administrating the program to 32 children, including a two-year follow-up evaluation to measure permanence of behavior change, is presented.


1978 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 55-58
Author(s):  
Virgene Martin ◽  
Roger Martin ◽  
Lawrence Hapeman

The effectiveness of a nine-week college preparation summer program for visually impaired high school students is evaluated. Feedback from the students and their rehabilitation counselors indicates that the program increased the readiness of the students in the areas of communication, studying, personal-social and mobility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-339
Author(s):  
Vitaly Z Kantor ◽  
Galina V. Nikulina ◽  
Irina N. Nikulina

Introduction. The diversification in education means, inter alia, establishing an institutional balance between integration and differentiation, which should also hold true for visually-impaired children. Junior age is a sensitive period for the development of communicative skills. Hence, one of the key tasks on the educational agenda for visually-impaired junior high school students is the development of communicative competence. The paper is the first attempt to identify how institutional and educational setting impacts the development of communicative competence in junior high school students, namely, such aspects of communicative competence as content/compliance with communication standards, attitude/role relationships, position/function, and involvement/activity. Materials and Methods.The evidence was obtained from four schools in Saint Petersburg and Leningrad Region. The survey included 55 respondents in grades 1‒3 with deferent degrees of visual impairment from inclusive educational settings with partial integration / differentiation. The methodology included such tools as Effective Communication: Raising Awareness of Visually-Impaired Students; a scale-based interview and questionnaire; L. Mikhelson’s Communication Skills test modified by L.S. Kolmogorova; Joint Sorting by G.V. Burmenskaya; and G.A. Tsukerman’s Picture Dictation. The data was processed using Student's t-test for dependent and independent samples and Pearson correlation coefficient. Results. The assessment of communicative competence in schoolchildren embraced several aspects: content/compliance with communication standards; attitude/role relationships; position/function; involvement/activity. In the context of inclusive education with partial integration and differentiation, visually-impaired junior high school students show different development levels of different aspects of communicative competence. This context has a selective and ambivalent effect. Discussion and Conclusion. The results may find application in the design and testing of a variable modular programme aimed at the development of communicative competence in visually-impaired junior high school students. The results may also lay the foundation for the rehabilitation and training strategy for visually-impaired students and facilitate their integration in social and educational environment.


PRASI ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
N.M.Y. Setyawati ◽  
L.D.S. Adnyani ◽  
K.S. Piscayanti

Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mendeskripsikan strategi belajar siswa dengan cacat visual (VIS). Ditemukan bahwa ada 6 strategi yang digunakan yaitu (1) kognitif yaitu berlatih, mengulang, mendapatkan ide,  menganalisis dan membuat reasoning, meringkas dan menerjemahkan; (2) metakognitif, mereka memperhatikan pelajaran dan menunjukkan bukti pemahaman; (3) strategi sosial, mereka berempati dengan orang lain, membuat pertanyaan, membuat ulasan, meminta saran, meminta konfirmasi; (4) afektif, dengan menurunkan kecemasan, (5) ingatan, dengan membuat asosiasi, membuat konteks kata kata, mengingat, mengingat pengalaman visual, membuat simpulan dan mengambil kembali ide sebelumnya; (6) kompensasi, dengan mengatasi keterbatasan dalam berbicara dan menulis, berusaha memberikan jawaban dan menggunakan bahasa campuran.Kata-kata kunci: EFL, strategi pembelajaran, siswa cacat visual


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