[rehab] Last chance to Pre-Register

Edward Bell ebell at latech.edu
Mon Jun 23 13:42:49 UTC 2014


Deadline for Pre-Registration

REGISTER NOW!



Contemporary Issues in Rehabilitation and Education 

For the Blind

13th ANNUAL REHABILITATION 

AND ORIENTATION AND MOBILITY CONFERENCE



Rosen Centre Hotel

9840 International Drive

Orlando, Florida 32819



Tuesday, July 1, 2014 

8:30 am - 7:30 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

2:00 - 5:00— Interactive Breakout Sessions

          5:00 - 7:30 pm—NBPCB Awards Reception



Registration Fee includes the NBPCB Awards Reception:

Cost:  Before June 15 — $85 for professionals; $75 for Students. 

 After June 15 — $100 for both students and professionals  

You may also register for the Unified English Braille workshop: Cost $40 for professionals; $20 for students



Go to the following URL to register:

https://nbpcb.org/members/er.php?eid=192

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

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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