Dr. Christine Roman-Lantzy was an Assistant Professor and Coordinator of the Program in Visual Impairment at Marshall University in S. Charleston, WV from 1999-2005. She is currently the Director of The Pediatric View Program at The Western Pennsylvania Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA. She runs the CVI Resource Website, where she offers families and professionals a reliable method to contact her for information or support regarding children with CVI. She has been working in the field of visual impairment since 1973, first as an itinerant teacher and O&M specialist in the public schools and later, in university settings preparing future teachers of the visually impaired. Her training in medically fragile, high-risk infants led her to develop a parallel career as an infant development specialist in a neonatal intensive care setting. Her understanding of children with CVI is a result of the joining of her work in both educational and medical settings.
Learning Opportunities
WEBINAR: Cortical Visual Impairment (CVI) - Implications of CVI on Instruction/Program Planning/Literacy
Presented By
Christine Roman-LantzySession Details
| Date | Time |
|---|---|
| January 17, 2018 | 3:30 pm to 4:30 pm |
Location
Grade Levels
AllDr. Christine Roman-Lantzy, a leading researcher and author in the area of cortical visual impairment (CVI) is also the author of an amazing CVI resource: Cortical Visual Impairment: An Approach to Assessment & Intervention. She provides learning teams working with children, with CVI, a manageable and functional approach to assessment and intervention. Dr. Roman’s approach focuses on success for each and every child as well as a way to track and document this success.
In this webinar, Dr. Roman will consider the new research and reflect in more detail about the implications this new research has on instruction, program planning and literacy.
This webcast features Dr. Christine Roman presenting an overview of Cortical Visual Impairment (CVI).
Target Audience
Teachers of the Blind/Visually Impaired, Speech Language Pathologists and Occupational Therapists working with BVI students