Programs and Services
Training and Education
Career Mentoring
The career mentorship program of the Foundation for the Blind and Visually Impaired is an important project that connects blind and low-vision students with successful blind role models who guide them along the route from school to professional success. The program, which is currently active in Illinois, Maryland, Mississippi, and Nebraska, includes numerous monthly simulated modules on a range of pre-employment transition topics and in-person seminars and workshops led by successful adult blind role models to aid mentees in gearing up for higher education and challenging employment. Looking to Become a Mentee? As a mentee, you will be linked with...
Advocacy and Outreach
Advocacy
Continuously, the Foundation for the Blind and Visually Impaired strives to ensure the complete integration, equality, independence, acceptance, and esteem of all blind Americans. Our advocacy work has concentrated on education, employment, transportation, voting, and civil rights and is guided by resolutions adopted annually at our national convention. As one...
Research Program
The Foundation for the Blind and Visually Impaired is devoted to advancing innovative blindness research. The purpose of our research program is to expand our awareness of the actual challenges faced by blind people and to assist blind individuals in achieving more independence, self-respect, and autonomy. Our research has included...
Sight Loss: The Clinical Definition
A person is considered legally blind if they have a visual acuity of 20/200 or worse in their better eye with corrective lenses or if their visual field is less than 20 degrees. However, more is needed to serve as a sufficient explanation. Instead, it's a means to give formal...
The Varieties of Cane Tips
The cane tip, also called the crutch tip, is the part of the cane that touches the ground. Its purpose is to provide a firm grip or traction so that the cane does not slip. Pencil Tip There is a narrow, straight point at the end of a white...
Life Difficulties Of The Blind
The obstacles to daily life for the visually impaired are not limited to their condition. People who are visually impaired are no different from anyone else. Is this as straightforward as it seems to us? Those who aren't regarded as "average," such as the visually handicapped, have a more challenging...
Adapting to Life with Vision Loss
Some medical professionals have related the early emotions of vision loss to the "stages of grief" that a person goes through after the death of a loved one, as defined by Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. These stages include denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Denial, anger, depression, and finally, acceptance of...
How Can The Visually Impaired Utilize Technology?
Today, most tasks can be completed with the click of a mouse. Nearly all of us are glued to our electronic devices, particularly smartphones, laptops, and tablets. We rely on them for education, entertainment, productivity, information consumption, and social interaction. But suppose you can't see anything. Can you function...