[rehab] Special Education Shortages
Husseini, Sahar
sahar.husseini at nebraska.gov
Thu Jan 21 17:19:33 UTC 2016
Hi, Adrijana,
I do understand. I come from a similar place. Change will come, but it will take time. Every small action helps. The sand on the beach didn't become so fine in a short time. It took thousands of years for the ocean to erode the rocks into sand. We just can't give up, and none of us can do it alone.
Sahar Husseini, NCLB, NCUEB, CVRCB, MSW
Orientation Counselor
(402) 471-8144
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-----Original Message-----
From: rehab [mailto:rehab-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of adrijana prokopenko via rehab
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 11:05 AM
To: Rehabilitation Counselor Mailing List
Cc: adrijana prokopenko
Subject: Re: [rehab] Special Education Shortages
I am glad when organizations achieve this. In my country, they would never employ a blind mobility instructor anywhere, even if there are some and in order for things to be changed around here, everyone should be willing to do their bit for the right causes.
On 1/21/16, Marianne Haas via rehab <rehab at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> Good Morning,
> My name is Marianne. I live in Northern CA. I am a retired Special
> Education Teacher. I have worked to change attitudes for a very long
> time, mostly by example. I have to say the following: It is very hard
> for any blind person, if school districts and contract agencies want
> teachers of the visually impaired to have drivers' licences.It is also
> hard, if people do not talk to the Teacher directly, but to the
> Supervisor, Assistant or anyone else, when there are questions. The
> best contacts I had with students and their parents. That is why I
> decided to have my own Tutoring/Advocacy/Employment service,
> specializing in assisting sstudents with special needs and their
> parents. I also tutor General Ed Students. I, for instance, tutor German to a young man on skype.
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Marianne
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: rehab [mailto:rehab-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Husseini,
> Sahar via rehab
> Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2016 7:49 AM
> To: Rehabilitation Counselor Mailing List
> Cc: Husseini, Sahar
> Subject: Re: [rehab] Special Education Shortages
>
> Hi, Adrijana,
>
> The only way for this to change is if we change it. I am proud to say
> that, in Nebraska, we have a blind travel instructor. The only way
> for prevailing attitudes about a group to change is if we, the people
> that belong to that group, make things change. It's never easy, but
> the road to end prejudice has never been easy to any group, at any time in history.
>
> Sahar Husseini, NCLB, NCUEB, CVRCB, MSW Orientation Counselor
> (402) 471-8144
> Like us on Facebook
> Follow us on Twitter
> Visit our Website at
> http://www.ncbvi.nebraska.gov
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: rehab [mailto:rehab-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of adrijana
> prokopenko via rehab
> Sent: Friday, January 08, 2016 11:42 AM
> To: Rehabilitation Counselor Mailing List
> Cc: adrijana prokopenko
> Subject: Re: [rehab] Special Education Shortages
>
> I agree with this, but most sighted people wouldn't give us the credit for
> this and would think that no one would find it safe to travel with a blind
> instructor, just as they would find it unsafe to go to a blind doctor or
> dentist.
>
> On 1/8/16, Dick Davis via rehab <rehab at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>>
>>
>> One of the main concerns in special education today is the shortage of
>> orientation and mobility specialists and teachers of blind children.
>> The shortage has been mentioned in professional communications and
>> listservs, and even mentioned by state departments of education, but
>> one obvious solution seems not to have occurred to the people who have
>> written about the problem – recruiting, training, and hiring blind
>> people. There are some real advantages blind professionals have, but two
>> stand out:
>>
>>
>>
>> 1. Blind people generally know a lot more about blindness than
>> sighted people.
>>
>> 2. Blind people generally have more self-interest in seeing that
>> other blind people get good education and training.
>>
>>
>>
>> Right now I think we are poised at the brink of a new era in special
>> education for the blind, one in which blind and sighted teachers can
>> work as partners for the benefit of blind students. And Louisiana
>> Tech can provide the kind of education that will enable blind persons
>> to enter orientation and mobility, teaching blind children, or both.
>>
>>
>>
>> So why don’t we have more blind people entering the field of work with
>> the blind, both special education and rehabilitation? I think it is
>> because blindness professionals often have low expectations for blind
>> people, which is half the problem, and blind people have low
>> expectations for blindness professionals, which is the other half. It’s a
>> classic vicious cycle.
>>
>>
>>
>> If we as blind and sighted members of the National Federation of the
>> Blind want better special education and rehabilitation services in
>> this country, we need to do something about it. That means preparing
>> intelligent, capable blind (and sighted) people for careers in special
>> education and rehabilitation.
>>
>>
>>
>> I know some of the attitudes about blindness at universities (a
>> notable exception being Louisiana Tech) aren’t the best. But they
>> aren’t going to get any better if we don’t do anything to fix them.
>> And Dr. Bell’s program should always be full, as should be NFB
>> training centers, which can help prepare capable blind people for those
>> professions.
>>
>>
>>
>> Please give the above some thought when you are considering career
>> choices. We need more capable blind people in special ed and rehab --
>> now!
>>
>>
>>
>> Dick Davis, chair
>>
>> NFB Employment Committee
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>>
>
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