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Supporters of School for the Blind Fill Assembly Chamber

In many ways, Barbara Seefeld's 17-year-old daughter Wendy leads a pretty typical teenager's life. She is a cheerleader and a swim team member. And she scored an impressive 20 on the ACT.


Supporters of the Wisconsin School for the Visually Handicapped packed the galleries in the State Assembly chamber. They urged legislators to reject State Superintendent John Benson's proposal to shut the school down at the end of this school year.

But Wendy, who is visually impaired, doesn't attend a typical high school. She is a student at the Wisconsin School for the Visually Handicapped in Janesville. If she attended the high school near her home in Germantown, her mother told legislators at a special hearing in the Capitol, Wendy would be denied "the normal experiences of high school" and would "have to endure torments and teasing."

Mrs. Seefeld was among a large and vocal group who filled the State Assembly chamber in Madison Tuesday (December 16, 1997). She and most of the others urged the Senate and Assembly Education Committees to reject a proposal by State Superintendent John Benson to close the School for the Visually Handicapped at the end of this school year. Teachers at the school are members of WEAC Council #1.

Benson argues that the school's enrollment has fallen to the point -- under 70 -- where it is no longer economical to operate the facility. He says visually handicapped boys and girls can be better served by their local school districts.

But school supporters, including teachers, students and parents, strongly disputed that at the hearing. Many said the reason enrollment at the school has dipped in recent years is that the Department of Public Instruction has dissuaded parents of visually handicapped students from sending their children there. The school, they said, provides a wide variety of important services and programs that many school districts can't begin to match.

According to the Wisconsin Council for the Blind, 18 school districts with blind or visually impaired students have no support from a certified vision instruction, 56 districts have no "orientation and mobility" instructors, and 35 have no aides available to assist in the education of blind or visually impaired students.

WSVH teacher Thomas Hanson said his school offers an expanded core curriculum that includes orientation and mobility training, social interaction skills, independent living skills, recreation and leisure skills, career education, use of assistive technology, and visual efficiency skills.

"WSVH offers personal and social growth factors including feeling of self worth, positive social experiences, opportunities for participation in extracurricular activities, the development of social maturity and positive attitude, independence, the future ability to live independently as an adult, and alleviation of negative social experiences that may have occurred in the prior public school placement," he said.

Hanson said the school can work as a partner with the student's local school district to ensure the student receives both specialized and integrated services.

Cheryl Williams, a vision teacher and orientation and mobility specialist in the Janesville School District, said in written testimony that the WSVH serves as an invaluable resource.

"I have little in the way of equipment for the visually impaired," she said. "As a result, I have relied on the WSVH for equipment loans, adapted textbooks, as well as their collaborative expertise in assessment and teaching approaches. ... I guarantee the cost to my district will be far greater than any amount of money disseminated to them should WSVH close."

Mrs. Seefeld said it was a very difficult decision to send Wendy to the school rather than keeping her at home.

"The question was, what was best for her? Keeping her at a local school was best for me, where I could watch over her and keep her safe," she said. "Allowing her to attend a specialized school, so full of opportunities for her, so far away ... it was an agonizing decision. But it was the right decision."

Posted December 16, 1997

 

At the Capitol News Archives