Bringing Hybrid
Vision Services
Where They Are Needed
Most In Virginia
Request Hybrid Vision Services
Who Is Virtual TVI?
Virtual TVI was founded in 2021 to support school districts across the country facing growing needs in vision education. In Virginia cities like Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Arlington, Norfolk, Richmond, Newport News, Alexandria, Hampton, and Roanoke, the shortage of certified Teachers of the Visually Impaired (TVIs) has made it harder to meet student needs. More children with visual impairments are entering schools, while the number of available professionals continues to fall short.
We believe every child with a visual impairment in Virginia deserves support from a Certified TVI. Whether the student lives in a busy metro area or a rural region, our team works directly with school staff and families to provide meaningful instruction and guidance.
Here’s how we support schools across Virginia:
Full-time virtual TVI coverage for your district
Part-time services to supplement your local team
Short-term support for staff leave, enrollment spikes, or new evaluations
Remote assessments for charter or private school students
Summer Braille tutoring, compensatory services, or ESY
From Fairfax County and Virginia Beach to Loudoun, Henrico, Prince William, and Chesterfield counties, Virtual TVI connects Virginia-certified professionals with the students who need them most.
Who Is A TVI?
A TVI is a Teacher of the Visually Impaired, also called a TSBVI Teacher of Students who are Blind or Visually Impaired. They teach the Expanded Core Curriculum for the Visually Impaired, which consists of 9 areas that students with low vision or blindness often need direct instruction to learn. Research says that up to 90% of the information we take in is visual. So, a student who has limited or no vision is going to miss out on a lot of incidental learning, which is the information most children pick up just by observing others.
Vision affects all areas of life, which is why it is so important that a Certified Teacher of the Visually Impaired conducts a Functional Vision and Learning Media Assessment on any student ages 0-22 who is suspected of having visual difficulties that cannot be corrected by glasses, etc. The 9 areas of the Expanded Core Curriculum that a Teacher of the Visually Impaired will assess and instruct in include: Sensory Efficiency, Compensatory Skills, Independent Living Skills, Assistive Technology, Social Skills, Orientation and Mobility, Self-Advocacy Skills, Recreation and Leisure Skills, and Career Education.
Our Hybrid Services & Competencies
Evaluations
Ongoing Services
Our Competencies
Unified English Braille code
Nemeth (math) Braille code
Music Braille code
Spanish Braille code
Computer Braille code
Visual Efficiency Skills development
Magnifiers
such as Matt Connect, Jupiter, Juno, Explore, and Ruby
Screen readers
such as JAWS, Voice Over, Talk Back, and NVDA
Braille note takers
such as Braille Note Touch Plus, Mantis 40, Monarch, and Chameleon