[rehab] One week left to register!

Edward Bell ebell at latech.edu
Wed Jun 20 19:20:40 UTC 2012


REGISTER NOW!

 

Contemporary Issues in Rehabilitation and Education 

For the Blind

11th ANNUAL REHABILITATION 

AND ORIENTATION AND MOBILITY CONFERENCE

 

Hilton Anatole Hotel, Dallas, Texas

Saturday, June 30, 2012, 8:00 am - 8:00 pm

 

Come and join us!  Once again, this year’s conference will be action packed with a variety of new speakers, topics, and hands-on events.

 

Schedule:

        7:30 - 8:30 am—Registration

        8:30 am—Conference Begins

        12:00-2:00 pm—NBPCB Awards Luncheon 

2:00—5:00 Interactive Breakout Sessions

        5:00 - 8:00 pm—Mix and Mingle Reception for    Rehabilitation Professionals

 

Registration Fee includes the Awards Luncheon:

        Before June 15—$75 for students; $100 for professionals 

        After June 15—$85 for students; $125 for professionals. 

 

Go to the following URL to register:

http://www.nbpcb.org/pages/conferences_dates.php

 

Those certified with NOMC and/or NCLB may register using their username and password.  All other participants should register as a guest. 

 

For questions or special arrangements, contact Dianne Reed at 318-257-4554, or dreed at latech.edu. 

 

Sponsors: 

National Blindness Professional Certification Board (NBPCB) Professional Development & Research Institute on Blindness (PDRIB

Louisiana Tech University

Edward C. Bell, Ph.D., CRC, NOMC

REGISTER TO TAKE THE NATIONAL CERTIFICATION IN LITERARY BRAILLE (NCLB) Exam 
http://www.nbpcb.org/pages/announcements.php

Get your T-Shirt to promote Independence for the Blind
http://www.gemini-rt.com/?page_id=37

Director, Professional Development and Research
Institute on Blindness
Louisiana Tech University
210 Woodard Hall
PO Box 3158
Ruston LA  71272
Office: 318.257.4554 
Fax: 318.257.2259 (Fax)
Skype: edwardbell2010
ebell at latech.edu
www.latech.edu/instituteonblindness
********************
"I am somehow less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." 
-- Stephen Jay Gould 


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