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Lashirah Glenn

a. Vision Board

b. Mitchelle, D., (2014) Expressive Arts Visioning with Vision Boards. Retrieved from:

https://www.goodtherapy.org/blog/expressive-arts-visioning-with-vision-boards-051214

Thomas, E., (2012). Can You Create a Vision Board with No Vision? Retrieved from:

https://www.fedoraoutlier.com/can-you-create-a-vision-board-with-no-vision/

c. Poster board, magazines, markers, scissors, glue sticks, pictures/stickers

d. To create a vision board first we must think of some things that we want or foresee for
ourselves in the near or prolonged future. It could be things like graduating college, buying a
house, traveling the world, etc. Vision boards can also include goals that we want to set for
ourselves such as, losing weight, working on our studying habits, or even learning a new
language. After the participant has an idea of the things they want to include on their board
they will need a poster board, markers, glue, stickers, magazine scraps, and whatever other
cool things they find to add to their board. So, from there the participant can use the stickers,
markers, and magazine scraps to illustrate their board that outlines some of these goals
previously mentioned. A vision board is very creative, there is no standard set of rules.

e. The primary interaction pattern is extraindividual because the participant will be directing
their actions toward the poster board.

f. An adaptation that could be made for someone who has total visual impairment would be
making the objects on the board raised. The participant can use tactile sensory to identify the
things on their board.

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