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Media Accessibility Information, Guidelines and Research
Summertime Cool: Ideas to Enrich and Teach
"What did you do on your summer vacation?" This was a familiar writing assignment for many people when they were growing up. I remember, don't you? The end of school is around the corner, and summertime fun will be here before we know it. Let's support students and their families in their building of great summer vacation memories with new ideas that inspire, as well as teach.
Inspiration comes from the Described and Captioned Media Program, a curricular resource for teachers, families, and orientation and mobility instructors. DCMP has numerous free-loan media items that support the Expanded Core Curriculum (ECC) for kids who are blind, have low vision, or are deaf-blind.
The ECC component of the National Agenda for the Education of Children and Youths with Visual Impairments, Including Those with Multiple Disabilities is seen by many school districts and agencies as a key area for building effective teaching practices for these children. It is a set of skills that are intended to assist the students, birth to 22 years of age, in becoming an independent, confident, capable member of his or her community. It goes beyond the reuglar core curriculum (such as math, reading, and science) and focuses on skills that are disability-specific (Pugh & Erin, 1999).
The nine areas of the ECC include: Assistive Technology/Technology, Career Education, Compensatory or Access Skills, Independent Living, Orientation and Mobility, Recreation & Leisure, Sensory Efficiency (auditory, tactual & visual), Self-Determination, and Social Interaction, (Hatlen, 1996; Lohmeir, Blankenship, & Hatlen, 2009).
As you plan for additional activities to keep your students' skills at their highest level, look to the DCMP resources and this Summertime Cool Lesson Calendar for ideas. When your students return to school, prepare to read and hear enthusiastic tales of cool fun.
Summertime Cool Lesson Calendar
The ECC Lesson Chart is a sampling of ideas and resources to build additional fun opportunities for teaching the Expanded Core Curriculum (ECC). Many of the resources support several ECC areas and may be used in different ways throughout the curriculum. The ECC Lesson Chart is meant to inspire you to continue your search for additional resources to build an ECC teaching portfolio.
Week | Sensory Efficiency | Compensatory/ Access Skills |
Social Interaction | Orientation & Mobility | Career Education | Recreation and Leisure | Independent Living | Self-Determination | Technology & Assistive Technology |
Attract birds to your schoolyard or home. Read More |
Increase opportunities for communication skills through drama. Read More |
Discuss the importance of friends and family in their lives. Read More |
Start an orientation & mobility Jeopardy game. Read More |
Here is a career exploration opportunity--get to know community workers. Read More |
Discuss steps to plan a day trip to a community museum, art gallery, or park. Read More |
Get out the measuring cups and spoons, pick a recipe, and enjoy cooking together. Read More |
Increase opportunities for making choices and decision making. Read More |
Keyboarding is an essential part of literacy programming. Read More |
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Play I spy. Read More |
Have your students watched any good books lately? Read More |
Discuss the importance of "looking your best." Read More |
Make a mobility story book. Read More |
Develop a survival kit for college. Read More |
Think of ways to record fun sports or indoor/outdoor recreation memories. Read More |
Limit the number of sedentary activities. Read More |
Discuss and practice good telephone manners. Read More |
Children first learn to listen and speak, then use these and other skills to learn to read and write. Read More |
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Work on improving their skills with their low vision devices. Read More |
Build vocabulary with meaningful stories and experiences. Read More |
Discuss how to make and be a friend. Read More |
Plan for a rainy day retreat. Read More |
Promote both volunteer and paid work opportunities. Read More |
Set the stage to entice and motivate students to want to travel. Read More |
Kids need to learn responsibility, self-esteem and self-worth. Read More |
Encourage reading about successful people who are visually impaired. Read More |
Building competent writers is important. Read More |
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Play mystery voice game. Read More |
Practice letter-writing skills. Read More |
Good body posture is important to making a good impression. Read More |
Go on an adventure. Read More |
Support development of mentorship opportunities with adults who are blind or have low vision. Read More |
Encourage outdoor activities. Read More |
Dress for success. Read More |
Provide opportunity for imaginative play that focuses on sharing. Read More |
Work on setting goals. Read More |
Resources
- Hatlen, P. (1996). The core curriculum for blind and visually impaired students, including those with additional disabilities. RE:view, 28, 25-32.
- Lohmeier, K., Blankenship, K., & Hatlen, P., (2009). Expanded core curriculum: 12 years later. Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 103(2) 103-112. New York.
- Pugh, G.S., & Erin, J. (1999). Blind and Visually Impaired Students; Educational Services Guidelines. Watertown, MA: Perkins School for the Blind.
About the Author
Mary Ann Siller, M.Ed., is first and foremost an educator of children who are blind or visually impaired, ages birth through twenty-one. Siller has vast experience developing and leading national education initiatives and advocating for access to instruction and information. She is most at home when she is working with families to inspire their young children to dream big and find their special path to adulthood. She continues to address the most critical issues impacting the field of blindness and works as an advocate and curriculum designer. In previous career positions, she oversaw educational programming, curriculum development, and professional training at a state and national level for the Texas Education Agency and American Foundation for the Blind. Additional experience includes teaching/consulting for students with visual impairments and liaison with school districts to implement Federal and State laws. Mary Ann resides in Dallas, Texas.