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Visual Impairment

Many people have some type of visual problem at some point in their lives. Some can no longer see objects far away. Others have problems reading small print. These types of conditions are often easily treated with eyeglasses or contact lenses.

But when one or more parts of the eye or brain that are needed to process images become diseased or damaged, severe or total loss of vision can occur. In these cases, vision can't be fully restored with medical treatment, surgery, or corrective lenses like glasses or contacts.

The American Foundation for the Blind estimates that 10 million people in the United States are visually impaired. Visual impairment is a term experts use to describe any kind of vision loss, whether it's someone who cannot see at all or someone who has partial vision loss.

Some people are completely blind, but many others have what's called legal blindness. They haven't lost their sight completely but have lost enough vision that they'd have to stand 20 feet from an object to see it as well as someone with perfect vision could from 200 feet away.

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                                                                                                                                                                                                                   https://kidshealth.org/en/teens/visual-impairment.html

Visual Impairment Information Websites

Apps Recommended for kids with Visual Impairment

Apps available in the Apple App Store & Android Play Store. 

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Seeing AL

Seeing AL unfortunately, is currently iOS, but it is free. 

Seeing AI can recognize and speak text detected by the smartphone camera, either in tiny snatches or full pages at a time. It can read bar codes on grocery and other product labels, offer up the product name, and usually additional information, such as nutrition labeling, cooking and other instructions.

Using Seeing AI you can snap pictures of your friends and family members, and later use the app to tell you who's nearby. An experimental setting can describe the scene around you, such as "A fenced-in yard," or "A blue door on an apartment building." You can also forward images you receive in email, or find on Facebook or Twitter, and Seeing AI will do its best to describe the action and read any text contained in the image.

Audible

Audible takes the visual aspect out of reading.

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Audible allows students to listen to stories on their devices (iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch) whenever they want, wherever they are.

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