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  2. Blindness and education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blindness_and_education

    The first school with a focus on proper education was the Yorkshire School for the Blind in England. Established in 1835, it taught arithmetic, reading and writing, while at the school of the London Society for Teaching the Blind to Read founded in 1838 a general education was seen as the ideal that would contribute the most to the prosperity ...

  3. Royal School for the Blind, Liverpool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_School_for_the_Blind...

    The Royal School for the Blind in Liverpool, England, is the oldest specialist school of its kind in the UK, having been founded in 1791. [1] Only the Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles in Paris is older, but the Royal School for the Blind is the oldest school in the world in continuous operation, and the first in the world founded by a blind person, Edward Rushton, who was also an anti ...

  4. Category : Schools for the blind in the United Kingdom

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Schools_for_the...

    Royal National College for the Blind (2 C, 14 P, 4 F) Pages in category "Schools for the blind in the United Kingdom" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.

  5. Royal National College for the Blind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_National_College_for...

    The Royal National College for the Blind (RNC) is a co-educational specialist residential college of further education based in the English city of Hereford.Students who attend the college are aged 16 to 25 and blind or partially sighted.

  6. Special education in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_education_in_the...

    Local authorities became responsible for the education of Deaf children and blind children in 1893. The education of children with disabilities became mandatory in the Education Act 1918. The prevailing attitude at the time was that disabled children should be sent to residential schools rather than attending mainstream schools. [19]

  7. Royal National Institute of Blind People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_National_Institute...

    RNIB (formally, the Royal National Institute of Blind People and previously the Royal National Institute for the Blind) is a British charity, founded in 1868, that serves people living with visual impairments. [2] It is regarded as a leader in the field in supporting people in the UK who have vision loss. [3]

  8. SeeAbility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SeeAbility

    Its original name was The School for the Indigent Blind, and it was established at St George's Fields, Southwark with the intention of educating young blind people and teaching them useful trades. [4] At first, it was housed in the former Dog and Duck tavern. [4] In 1800 fifteen pupils were housed and instructed in the Long Room.

  9. New College Worcester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_College_Worcester

    In 1936, the British and Foreign Blind Association (which later became the RNIB) took over all financial responsibility for the school, until 2007 when NCW split from the RNIB. [2] In 1944, an Act of Parliament (the Education Act 1944) recognised the establishment as an official grammar school for blind boys. [2]