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Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind

The Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind Mission

Discover how we are limitless!

The Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind’s (AFCB) mission is to guide adults who are blind through the necessary skills and processes of adjustment to blindness so that the student can lead the independent, productive, and fulfilling life of his or her choice.

The Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind Purpose

Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind (AIDB) and Alabama Department of Rehabilitation Services (ADRS) have recognized the need for a residential training facility for the blind located in an urban environment that utilizes the nontraditional instructional and philosophical methodology. 

Located in Decatur, within the AFCB, students learn that the challenges of blindness can be overcome through proper use of the techniques of blindness and through problem-solving strategies.

Through the classes taught, experiences provided, and the relationships developed with staff and other students, participants come to internalize the truth about blindness — that it is a part of who they are — just as any other characteristic, like skin color, height or gender. With that acceptance, each student can then rise to the level of their true potential unfettered by artificial limitations as defined by societal misconceptions.

The truth is that proper training in the techniques of blindness - combined with the students’ ability be confident in who they are as blind people, recognizing that the lack of eyesight takes nothing away from their individual dignity, respectability or capacity - will result in as student who is equal to the challenges of life. By the end of their training, students will be prepared to enter vocational training, postsecondary education, or the workforce with the confidence and skills to succeed!

Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind (AFCB) Overview

In partnership with ADRS, the AFCB program fosters confidence-building techniques by moving students who are blind from instructor-guided learning into an environment focused on personal cognitive skills that define independence in braille, travel, technology, daily living, and job skills.

A distinct philosophy using learning shades, white canes, and instructors who have been immersed in the learning method for acquiring a set of cognitive problem-solving and perceptual skills with the student actively participating in the learning process. Learning occurs in consciously-structured problem situations in which the student must discover a satisfactory solution. The cognitive techniques employed are reinforced and generalized with the instructor's assistance. The ultimate goal is for roles to become reversed where confidence and empowerment result in self-analysis. Simply: The student no longer requires the instructor as the student has become a confident and capable problem-solver.

The AFCB is an intense, hands-on nine-month immersion into Braille, Independent Living, Assistive Technology, Cane Travel, Residential Living, and confidence-building activities, which gives adults in Alabama and the Southeast geographic access to this proven service option. The Alabama Freedom Center for the Blind encourages and empowers the student while honing existing and building new skill sets. 

The AFCB is currently located at 4104 U.S. Hwy 31 S in Decatur, Alabama. 

Anticipated Student Outcomes

Student Objectives include Individual Assessment; Developing Self-Confidence and High Expectations; Personal Adjustment to Blindness or Visual Impairment; Acquiring Competent Alternative Blind / Blindness Skills, and Enhanced Employment Skills and/or Post-Secondary Options.

Objectively, student success will be measured in a quantifiable number of skills successfully completed within each area of blindness skills taught to achieve graduation. Likewise, a student will be considered successful if the program graduate has been accepted into and is pursuing further vocational education, such as attending a trade school, a vending program, or a university degree. A student will also be deemed successful if that graduate has acquired employment. 

To learn more, contact Isaac Beavers at beavers.isaac@aidb.org for more information and/or to schedule your tour. We’d love to show you around, introduce you to our staff and students, and get you on your way to living the life you want. 

A guide dog looks on as two A.F.C.B. students sit on a space simulator. A third man stands between them.
Director Tai is upside down in the Multi Axis Trainer.
Hope Williams holds a plate of cupcakes.
Commander and pilot look back while preparing for takeoff.
A student types at a computer with the assistance of the student standing behind her.
Two students are rolling out dough in a kitchen
A student using a white cane to walk in front of an A.I.D.B. building.
A student walking onto a bus.
A student using a braille typewriter with another student by her side.