Visual Supports For Students With Disabilities Alicia Hembree and Kimberly Graham
Visual Supports For Students With Disabilities Alicia Hembree and Kimberly Graham
Visual Supports For Students With Disabilities Alicia Hembree and Kimberly Graham
Zebehazy and Wilton researched the use of visual graphics by students with visual
impairments. The study was conducted used both quantitative and qualitative techniques by
analyzing surveys conducted with teachers of students with visual impairments both in Canada
and the United States. The quantitative data consisted of the responses from 26 Likert scale
questions. The qualitative items were comprised of five open-ended questions. The survey link
was emailed to teachers of the visually impaired and 306 teachers responded. The answers to the
open-ended questions were categorized into five groups summarized as barriers for print graphic
users, barriers for tactile graphic users, tactile graphic instructional strategies, tactile print user
success, and print graphic user success. Then, the answers were analyzed to find common themes
and then broken down to subthemes.
The results of the study found that although teachers use visuals often in their instruction,
they face many challenges. A few of the challenges mentioned were the lack of time to produce
the visuals, lack of time to teach the materials, lack of consistency of the materials produced, and
student development through the use of visuals. In the future, teachers should advocate for
appropriate service levels, early exposure to curriculum, and continued graphic literacy.
Although the researchers provided adequate data, more information on the participants of the
study was needed to truly understand the data set. What grade level do they teach? How long
have they been teaching? What preparation programs have they attended? All of these factors
influence not only their opinions on the use of visuals, but also their implementation of graphics
into their classroom.
The article brought forth many new insights to the study of graphics. Usually people tend
to think of graphics as something someone sees with their eyes, however, this article introduces
the use of tactile graphics for students with visual impairments. A blind persons eyes are
essentially their hands. They must see the graphic with their hands. Although the exposure to
graphics is different, the students continue to receive information in two different ways
increasing the likeliness of retention and comprehension of the information.
Article 2
Gast, D.L., Luscre, D., Pierce, J. M., & Spriggs, A. D. (2013). Effects of visual activity schedules
on independent classroom transitions for students with autism. International Journal of
Disability, Development, and Education, 60, 253-269.
The article presents research on the effectiveness of visual activity schedules on the
behavior of students with autism. A visual behavior system is a set of pictures to describe a
sequence of events. The participants of this study were four students who were served in a selfcontained class for students with moderate Autism. The intervention took place in the students
self-contained classroom, where they spent most of their school day. The researchers used an
experimental design which resulted in quantitative data. The students were observed presenting
the behaviors and they repeatedly introduced and withdrew the intervention. They collected data
using event recording. When the VAB was in place, increased independent transition behaviors
were observed across all four students. The results correlated with previous research completed
with other disabilities that supports using visual activity schedules with students with intellectual
disabilities and learning disabilities.
To strengthen the research, the researchers could have taken data across multiple settings.
The current study only addressed the use of visual activity schedules in the self-contained
classroom and not more inclusive settings such as the lunchroom or special classes. The
population of the study was also very limited, so limited that we cannot make generalizations
regarding the results. The population of the study did not reflect varying ages, genders, or races.
The results of the study help support the idea that students with disabilities need visual
communication tools to communicate effectively and improve their overall understanding. The
strategy of using visual activity schedules can increase independent behaviors and support
students in transitions.
Article 3
Ciullo, S. (2015). Improving Access to Elementary Social Studies Instruction: Strategies to
Support Students with Learning Disabilities. Teaching Exceptional Children. Nov/Dec,
(102-109). http://tcx.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/09/25/0040059915605640.extract
The article presents the idea that elementary age students are receiving less instruction in
social students. The principle reason the author provides for this disparity is because the other
core subjects, reading, language arts, math and science, have a mandated standardized test at the
end of the school year. Thus, teachers, feeling the pressure to have their students exhibit good
performance on these test, spend the vast majority of instructional time on those subjects, to the
exclusion of social studies. Specifically, the article focuses on how this minimized instruction
affects students with disabilities. The article provides a variety of strategies to incorporate social
studies into the curriculum, with considerations specific to students with disabilities. The author
predominantly describes the process of using qualitative data to prove the worthiness of the
strategies. Two of the strategies, promoting social studies curricula within co-taught, inclusion,
classes and applying evidence based strategies within a station teaching framework, are the
perfect opportunity for introducing media-based instruction to revolutionize the existing teaching
pedagogy. However, the article is quite limited with regards to an understanding of the use of
multimedia instruction as more than a tool in one of these strategies and with regards to the use
of quantitative data.
The primary strength of this article is the understanding that students with disabilities
deserve equitable access to the curriculum, including the social studies curriculum. The strategy
of promoting social studies curricula within co-taught classes incorporates the use of various
websites designed to promote reading comprehension for students with disabilities. However, the
use of websites as a tool for aiding instruction espouses main weakness of this piece. If teachers
use websites, apps, smart boards, etc. as merely tools to add to existing pedagogy, then the actual
learning process never changes. For example, this strategy could have included reading strategies
that incorporate visual timelines, like those created on piktochart.com, or graphic cartoons that
both aid in reading comprehension and utilized the brain-based strategies (with regards to the
power of visual media). Additionally, the second strategy of applying evidence based strategies is
equally limited. One of the strategies described in this section as being successful for students
with disabilities is process of breaking materials into smaller chunks, as opposed to larger, lessstreamlined instruction. Again, this is a sound practice, but by incorporating media into the
presentation of the small segments of curriculum, students with disabilities could be provided
with more individualized, more powerful learning. And, to strengthen the research, the article
could have provided quantitative data: pre- and post- tests, benchmarks, cumulative assessment,
etc.
Reflection
To move past merely using media to add to existing teaching practices, sufficient practice
and research analyzing those practices must occur. What I encountered during this research
process it that the existing research is often too limited in scope and/or lacks practices that