Sighted Guide

9
Sighted Guide By Michelle Parker

description

Sighted Guide. By Michelle Parker. Basic Sighted Guide. Purpose: To enable the student to utilize a sighted guide safely and efficiently. Basic Method. With the back of his hand the guide contacts the student’s arm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Sighted Guide

Page 1: Sighted Guide

Sighted Guide

By Michelle Parker

Page 2: Sighted Guide
Page 3: Sighted Guide

Basic Sighted Guide

• Purpose: To enable the student to utilize a sighted guide safely and efficiently.

Page 4: Sighted Guide

Basic Method

• With the back of his hand the guide contacts the student’s arm.

• The student moves his hand up the guide’s arm into position just above the elbow.

Page 5: Sighted Guide

Rationale

• The purpose behind this method is to maintain constant contact with the guide’s arm which avoids unnecessary grouping and helps to locate the proper position above the guide’s elbow.

Page 6: Sighted Guide

Observations

• Contact may also be established by the guide supplying a verbal clue in the context of the conversation. Ex. “Sue it’s Mrs. Parker do you want some help?”.

• The position can be modified when there is extreme difference in height between student and guide.

Page 7: Sighted Guide

Positioning• The student’s thumb is

positioned just above the elbow on the lateral side of the guide’s arm with the remaining four fingers on the medial side, with a grip that is secure.

• The arm of the student should form and angle of 90% approximately with the forearm pointing forward.

Page 8: Sighted Guide

Positioning• In order to afford optimal

informational feedback the thumb and fingers must be in proper position. A secure grip is also important.

• The positional relationship between the student and the guide allows the student reaction time. The student should be about ½ step behind guide.

Page 9: Sighted Guide

Resources

• Hill, Everett and Ponder, Purvis, O&M Techniques- a Guide for the Practitioner, American Federation for the Blind New York, New York, 1976.

• Glover, Donna, Instruction in Basic O&M Techniques, 2008.