Tag Archive

blind babies

New Program: LightHouse Little Learners Weekly Playgroup

New Program: LightHouse Little Learners Weekly Playgroup

LightHouse’s newest department, LightHouse Little Learners, is excited to announce a brand new program for the littlest members of our community and their families!

Starting April 7, bring your giggles and wiggles to Little Learners weekly Zoom Playgroup, Thursdays from 9:30 am to 10:15 am. Enjoy fun activities with your little one, ages 0-6, while learning strategies to support your child’s visual, sensory, motor and concept development. Connect with other families who understand and share your experience raising a child who is blind, has low vision, or CVI. Weekly activities are designed to be accessible for all, and to build upon monthly themes that you can integrate into your family routines. All are welcome!

Learn more about what goes on during a Little Learners playgroup session from LightHouse Little Learners Program Director, Pam Chapin.

For more information or to register, please email Jacqueline Barden at littlelearners@lighthouse-sf.org or call 415-694-7657. Meet you in the Zoom Room!

LightHouse Little Learners Hosts its First Event- the Well-Renowned Lowenfeld-Akeson Early Years Symposium

LightHouse Little Learners Hosts its First Event- the Well-Renowned Lowenfeld-Akeson Early Years Symposium

The Lowenfeld-Akeson Symposium is held every winter to educate service providers, families and students about new developments in the fields of pediatric ophthalmology, neurology and early childhood education of children who are blind or have low vision. It is named after two leading lights in the field of early childhood development, Dr. Berthold Lowenfeld and educator Nancy Akeson. For the past 26 years a number of California-based organizations in this field co-host the symposium and LightHouse is extremely proud to be one of this year’s hosts.

LightHouse board Chair Dr. Sharon Sacks, is a longtime and key organizer of this annual event to help inform professionals and families about best practices in the field of early education, from birth to seven years of age, of children who are blind, deafblind, have low vision or cerebral visual impairment.

This year’s Symposium is entitled “Digging Deeper: Exploring prematurity from visual diagnosis to active learning.” Distinguished speakers will be:

William V. Good, MD, Senior Clinical Research Scientist at the Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute (SKERI), who will speak on The ABCs of Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP)

Douglas Fredrick, MD, Director of the Elk’s Children Eye Clinic at the Casey Eye Institute, Oregon Health Sciences University, who will speak on Cortical Visual Impairment in the Premature Infant: Seeing In/Looking Out

Patty Obrzut, MS, OTR/L, Assistant Director of the Pendrickton Center for Blind Children, who will speak on Active Learning: Promoting independence and learning in children with multiple special needs

There will be Q&A sessions with each of our presenters.

This event is taking place on Saturday, February 5 over Zoom, from 9.00 am to 3:00 pm. If you are a professional in the early development field, a student interested in the area or a family of a child who is blind or has low vision, this stimulating and thought-provoking event is for you.

The cost is $20 for families and students, and $40 for professionals.

Join a supportive cohort of interested people to learn the latest thinking in this field. You can register here: https://tinyurl.com/bucz64zj

If you have any questions concerning this year’s event, please email at LowenfeldAkeson@gmail.com or call, Jacqueline Barden, at 415-694-7366.

Photos: Blind Babies

Check out these adorable photos from our recent Blind Babies and Families session at Enchanted Hills Camp in Napa! All photos courtesy Marilyn Bogerd. See more and share your own on the Enchanted Hills Camp Facebook page.

Baby, resembling a celebrity in shades and tank-top, reclines in strollerAbove: Casual baby, resembling a celebrity in shades and tank-top, reclines in stroller
young boy poses, mouth agape, parents stylish between father's tattoos and mother's fedoraAbove: young boy poses, mouth agape, stylish between his father’s tattoos and mother’s fedora
little boy is not afraid to get messy when it comes to fingerpaintingAbove: little boy is not afraid to get messy when it comes to fingerpainting
Coltrane looks classically charming in his baby-blue-rimmed spectaclesAbove: Coltrane looks classically charming in his baby-blue-rimmed spectacles
baby rests in mother's arms, sporting white-rimmed sunglassesAbove: baby rests in mother’s arms, sporting white-rimmed sunglasses