Resources for professionals working with children and young people

Many professionals in health, education and social care will only occasionally meet a family who have a child with multi-sensory impairments and may be uncertain how best to support their MSI needs.  Sense works with these families every day and are ideally placed to help you support them. 

A girl in class making something with help from a teacherWe can support you in a number of ways:

Deafblindness and multi-sensory impairment affects children's development in many ways, and these effects may be increased by hospitalisation and the demands of medical treatment. Other people, especially families, can help deafblind children to understand the world around them by using key approaches. These approaches will also help the child to develop relationships with others.

General resources

Resources for teaching professionals

Deafblind children often behave differently to sighted hearing children. Children who are multi-sensory-impaired get very little information about the world around them, and so find it difficult to understand.

This does not mean that they have cognitive learning difficulties, although some children do. Similarly, many deafblind children show difficulties with communication and social relationships, without having autistic spectrum disorders.

  • Learning environment - information about adapting the environment to suit development and learning
  • Information about the curriculum, including how to modify it for deafblind children
  • Teaching strategies - information to help teachers effectively work with children and young adults who are deafblind
  • MSI Curriculum - download a copy of the curriculum document for multi-sensory-impaired children, which was created in 2009 by Heather Murdoch and the MSI unit at Victoria School, Birmingham, and published by Sense
  • Training opportunities - information on training courses for teaching professionals working with deafblind children

First published: Monday 21 May 2012
Updated: Thursday 16 August 2012