The 9 Days of Holiday with the Expanded Core Curriculum: Compensatory or Functional Academic Skills
What Are Compensatory or Functional Academic Skills?
Compensatory or functional academic skills include teaching the skills needed for children who are visually impaired to access information and the world just like their peers without vision loss.
- Write a letter to Santa (braille or large print). Learn more about brailling a letter to Santa and receive a braille letter in return using BrailleWorks.
- Have your child write a list of friends and family he wants to purchase or make gifts for.
- Put braille on the Christmas or Hanukkah gift labels.
- Add braille to your cards or simply have your child sign his name on each card in braille. You may even want to add pictures using braille dots as described in Adding a Braille Touch to Special Occasions.
- Give the gift of braille or large print books for the holidays.
- Your child can use his monocular to play iSpy with ornaments on the Christmas tree.
- Have your child help you write a shopping list for a family dinner (in braille if needed).
- If your child isn’t reading yet, use a tactile marker for labeling his presents (ex. piece of sandpaper, a textured sticker, or even a small object or a certain bow).
- If your child has a communication device, incorporate holiday activities through choices by letting him select a song to sing, music to listen to, or holiday treat to eat.
- Create an accessible calendar of your holiday plans.