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Annual Resources for Serving Students with Sensory Disabilities.

The link found below contains the information:

Annual Resources for Serving Student with Sensory Disabilities

Attachment A

Superintendent’s Memo #278-21

October 1, 2021

Virginia Department of Education Annual Resources for Serving Students with Sensory Disabilities (Revised 10/2021)

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) provides information on educational services and resources to support students who are deaf and hard of hearing, blind or visually impaired, or deaf-blind on its website. The following are links to information and resources excerpted from the VDOE’s Sensory Disabilities webpage:

Guidance Documents

Deaf and Hard of Hearing 

Blindness and Visual Impairment

State Agencies

  • The Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind (VSDB) is located in Staunton, Virginia and provides a Kindergarten (K)-12 educational day program, outreach services, and residential services exclusively for Virginia students who are deaf or hard of hearing, blind or visually impaired, or deaf-blind. The VSDB Outreach Services assist early intervention programs, local school divisions, and families in meeting the needs of children with sensory disabilities across the Commonwealth. The VSDB’s admissions policy is available on its website.

Technical Assistance Centers 

  • The Accessible Instructional Materials Center-Virginia (AIM-VA) developed an extensive library and alternative system for providing accessible educational media under standards set by federal law to students who meet the federal requirements for print disabilities and who are eligible for accessing educational media through an Individualized Education Program (IEP). The AIM-VA, in conjunction with partnering agencies, provides required accessible educational materials to students and training for school division staff, at no cost to Local Educational Agencies. 

  • Contact: CFI Office at (877) 567-1122 or TTY relay; (800) 828-1120

  • The Technical Assistance Center for Children Who Are Deaf and Hard of Hearing (TAC-DHH) provides information, training, and technical assistance pertaining to children who are deaf and hard of hearing. Assistance is available to Virginia public school divisions, including early childhood special education and early intervention programs, through the Virginia Network of Consultants for Professionals (VNOC) Working with Children Who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing.

  • The Virginia Hearing Aid Loan Bank (HALB) provides hearing aids and FM systems for children in Virginia under age 18 whose hearing loss is confirmed by an audiologist.  Devices are loaned at no cost for up to six months while families/school divisions are waiting for a permanent device to arrive. 

provides technical assistance, training, distance education, and networking information to service providers and families of children with deaf-blindness/dual sensory disabilities. 

Professional Training Programs

  • Radford University’s Deaf and Hard of Hearing Program offers Virginia’s only academic program leading to Virginia teacher licensure with an endorsement in Special Education-Deaf and Hard of Hearing PreK-12. Courses are taught through combined on-campus, distance education, and varied educational field experiences.  The comprehensive program teaches all communication/instructional approaches used with students who are deaf and hard of hearing. Tuition assistance is available for qualified Virginia teachers. 

  • The Virginia Consortium for Teacher Preparation in Visual Impairment (VI Consortium) is the only academic program in Virginia for teacher preparation leading to Virginia teacher licensure with an endorsement in Special Education-Visual Impairment PreK-12. Classes are offered through combined on-campus, video, and web conferencing through three universities: George Mason, Old Dominion, and Radford. Tuition assistance is available for qualified Virginia teachers.

  • The Educational Interpreter Services and Training VDOE provides grant funding to assist Virginia educational interpreters and cued language transliterators with acquiring and maintaining the required skills and qualifications to work with children who are deaf and hard of hearing in Virginia public schools. Free regional workshops and mentoring support are available.

For questions regarding this guidance, contact Wanda Council, Education Specialist, in the Office of Special Education Instructional Services, by phone at (804) 371-4059, or email at Wanda.Council@doe.virginia.gov.