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This research investigates the advantages and roles of bilingualism in Indian school children with low vision impairment. Bilingualism, especially in a multilingual nation like India, may provide significant cognitive, social, and educational benefits. These advantages are considerably more apparent in children with modest visual impairments. The study focuses on a sample group of 100 school-aged children with varied degrees of low vision impairment and investigates how bilingual education influences their learning and social integration. The research uses both qualitative and quantitative approaches to evaluate cognitive development, language competency, and social interaction abilities in a bilingual setting. The findings show that bilingualism increases not just linguistic capabilities but also cognitive flexibility, problem-solving ability, and social empathy in young children. This study contends that bilingual education should be an essential component of the curriculum for visually impaired students in India, promoting their general development and integration into society. The results have major implications for educational policies and practices involving special needs children in multilingual settings.
Authors:
Male Shiva Ram M.S, PhD: University of Hyderabad; PHANI KRISHNA: University of Delhi; Baskar Theagarayan: University of Huddersfield
