Journal of Vision Cover Image for Volume 23, Issue 9
August 2023
Volume 23, Issue 9
Open Access
Vision Sciences Society Annual Meeting Abstract  |   August 2023
The impact of cerebral visual impairment on school related competences in elementary school children
Author Affiliations
  • Sara Monteiro
    Luxembourg Centre for Educational Testing, University of Luxembourg
  • Géraldine Hipp
    Centre pour le Développement des Compétences relatives à la Vue, MENJE
  • Pascale Esch
    Luxembourg Centre for Educational Testing, University of Luxembourg
  • Sonja Ugen
    Luxembourg Centre for Educational Testing, University of Luxembourg
Journal of Vision August 2023, Vol.23, 4889. doi:https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.23.9.4889
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      Sara Monteiro, Géraldine Hipp, Pascale Esch, Sonja Ugen; The impact of cerebral visual impairment on school related competences in elementary school children. Journal of Vision 2023;23(9):4889. https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.23.9.4889.

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      © ARVO (1962-2015); The Authors (2016-present)

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Abstract

Cerebral vision impairment (CVI) refers to a disturbance in visual processing related to damage to the visual areas in the brain and/or visual pathways. It is often assumed that CVI underlies functional vision difficulties. Previous research estimated that around 3% of mainstream educated elementary school children have CVI, potentially compromising these students’ school related performance. This study aimed to clarify how CVI impacts children’s performance in school competence tests. As part of the Luxembourgish school monitoring, the complete cohort of first graders (N = 5536) participated in three competence tests (mathematics, early literacy and listening comprehension) and student/parent questionnaires (background information). From this cohort, a representative sample (n = 1129) also participated individually in a visual competences’ screening (Evaluation of Visuo-Attentional Abilities battery, optometric measures). For this study, the sample was divided into children with CVI (n = 38) and children without CVI (n = 890) based on the clinical screening outcome. Children with other diagnoses were excluded from the sample (n = 201). Results from multiple regressions showed that CVI children obtained significantly lower scores than children without CVI for mathematics and early literacy but not for listening comprehension, when controlling for background characteristics (gender, socio-economic status, migration background, parental education, and home language). Listening comprehension was however a significant predictor for mathematics and early literacy for both groups, when controlling for background measures. More specifically, the explained variance of these models was higher for CVI children suggesting that they highly rely on auditory compensation strategies to complete written achievement tests. The prevalence rate for CVI was 3% within the representative sample, confirming internationally reported rates. These results show the impact of CVI on school related performances and the need for the implementation of a systematic early identification of children at risk.

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