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Indiana School for the Blind planning for next 100 years

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Indiana School for the Blind planning for next 100 years


INDIANAPOLIS (MIRROR INDY) — When the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired relocated to Indy’s far east side this year, there were naturally a lot of questions.

Would the new facilities accommodate the students’ needs? How would the students get to the new campus from the current one on 42nd Street? And would they lose some students in the transition?

But for Jazmine Nelson, a junior who has attended the school since 2018, the move to the school’s temporary location in a former IPS school has brought unexpected benefits.

“At the last campus that we were all at, it was all separated — like elementary was in a building, middle school, high school was in a building,” she said. “Having everyone put together kind of brings us closer as a school and as more of a community.”

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The move took place at the start of the school year as part of a $655 million project to combine the campuses of the state’s school for blind and low vision learners and the Indiana School for the Deaf.

Together, both schools will see the construction of new, state-of-the-art facilities tailored to the needs of their students. For example, educators have requested dimmable lighting to accommodate kids with light sensitivity and high-contrast floor and hallway designs to help low vision students easily identify their place in a building.

It will be the first time either school has seen significant renovations in 25 years.

“Sometimes it’s a little pressure thinking about how we’re trying to build this building for the next 100 years,” Principal Jay Wilson said, “but it’s been a good and interesting process.”

Designing a new campus

The Indiana School for the Blind enrolls more than 100 kids a year in pre-K through 12th grade. The school serves students from across the state and about 30 of its students, this year, live on campus.

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Indiana lawmakers have dedicated $465 million to the project through state appropriations. Another $190 million is being financed through federal pandemic relief dollars. Officials broke ground on a combined campus in August.

Plans call for moving the Indiana School for the Deaf from its 42nd Street campus just north of the Indiana State Fairgrounds to a shared location at the 75th Street and College Avenue campus where the Indiana School for the Blind has taught students since 1930.

Both schools house students from across the state in on-campus residential buildings and will see the construction of new dorms.

Additionally, a new academic center, fieldhouse, athletic fields and greenhouse will be built on the sprawling, 67-acre campus. Other existing structures, such as the school’s administration building and bell tower, will be renovated.

Though the two schools will share a campus, each will have its own dedicated space. Students and staff from both schools have met with architects to describe what they would like in the new campus.

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Local firms Ratio Design and American Structurepoint also have enlisted the help of two renowned accessibility experts — architects Chris Downey, who is blind, and John Dickinson, who is deaf.

James Michaels, superintendent of the Indiana School for the Blind, said he appreciates the understanding the two architects bring to the project. The team, for example, has brought tactile versions of their drawings to meetings with Michaels, who is blind, so he can better follow along as they describe their work.

“They have perspective from their own experiences,” Michaels said. “They really have done a lot of things to help me understand what the campus is going to look like.”

Settling into temporary space

Indiana School for the Deaf students are able to attend classes as they normally would through the construction.

But students of the Indiana School for the Blind are taking classes at IPS’ former George Buck School 94. Some support offices have been moved to another closed IPS school, Floro Torrence School 83. Residential students are staying in dorms on the Indiana School for the Deaf campus.

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The transition to the temporary space required some adjustments. Braille lettering was placed outside each door, cane holders were installed in classrooms and high contrast markings were added to doors frames to increase their visibility. However, Principal Jay Wilson said, overall changes were minimal.

“Our overall philosophy is that our students, once they leave us, go into a world that is a sighted world,” Wilson said. “So actually it’s a good, real-life lesson.”

To accommodate students, Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired classes typically have far fewer students assigned to each classroom. That means the spaces at School 94 felt especially roomy to the students and teachers.

They might be relocated for three to five years — depending on how long construction takes — so school leaders are taking steps to make School 94 feel like their own. A greenhouse was built in an enclosed courtyard and school leaders say they’re also excited to offer new classes this spring in a recently finished adaptive kitchen.

The kitchen features countertops of varying heights, no-burn cooktops and tactile markings on appliances. School leaders say they will take some of the donated materials when they move back to the original campus.

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The biggest challenge so far, Wilson said, has been a lack of office space.

With occupational and physical therapy programs on site, the school employs far more adult staff than a traditional school. That means converting classrooms to temporary offices was an early priority during the temporary relocation.

“It’s a new normal for us,” Wilson said. “Sometimes kids can be more adjustable than adults, but I think everybody has done a good job of assimilating to a new normal.”

Listening to students

Nelson, who is a residential student from northwest Indiana, said she’s grown more accustomed to the daily commute from the dorms on 42nd Street to the Indiana School for the Blind’s eastside school building.

The 15-year-old has some vision but struggles to make out colors and details. She described her experiences with vision as being like “you’re watching a really old movie that doesn’t have color yet.” Those differences, she said, stand out in a traditional classroom.

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She tried returning to her traditional public school for a brief period this year, but found the Indiana School for the Blind could better accommodate her needs for specific materials. And, the school’s high contrast hallways were easier to navigate.

“There’s still times where the lights in the classroom are too bright,” Nelson said, “But, here, I feel like the teachers understand you a lot more.”

At the Indiana School for the Blind, she also is able to participate in cheer, track and forensics. Nelson is interested in becoming a teacher or psychologist, and she’s getting experience working with elementary students at the school, teaching them about braille and voiceover technology.

That’s all become easier now that students of all ages are in the same building.

“I’m just able to, like, walk down a hallway and turn a corner, and it’s right there,” she said.

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The junior will graduate long before the campus redesign is finished, but she had a chance to share her ideas with architects as they began designing new buildings.

Her requests? More dimmable lighting, common areas and suite-style dorms in student residence halls.

“I’m sad that I won’t be able to experience it,” Nelson said. “However, I’m grateful that I’m able to contribute to other students’ experiences and being able to be in a school that was designed with their ambitions and dreams in mind.”

The Indiana Blind Children’s Foundation, a nonprofit that supports the school, will have a fundraiser March 1. The 2025 No Limits Celebration at Butler’s Schrott Center for the Arts will feature a performance by Lachi, a globally touring performing artist who was born legally blind.

Doors open for a reception at 6 p.m. A one-hour concert will begin at 8 p.m. followed by deserts and a Q&A with Lachi. Tickets start at $50 and are available online.

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Mirror Indy reporter Carley Lanich covers early childhood and K-12 education. Contact her at carley.lanich@mirrorindy.org or follow her on X @carleylanich.





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Slim chances for a white Christmas in Lafayette area and in Indiana

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Slim chances for a white Christmas in Lafayette area and in Indiana


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  • Indiana is unlikely to have a white Christmas because of forecasted warmer-than-normal temperatures.
  • Temperatures on Christmas Day are expected to be in the 40s or 50s, possibly reaching the 60s.
  • The normal high temperature for the Lafayette area this time of year is 36 degrees.

LAFAYETTE, IN — Hopes for a white Christmas are fading quickly in Indiana.

“I know earlier in the month we were thinking we might have a higher chance of a white Christmas,” National Weather Service meteorologist Cody Moore said, “but unfortunately, I have some bad news for you. A lot of long-range guidance has been consistent showing a pattern on Christmas Day featuring much warmer than normal temperatures for the region and the chance for some rainfall.

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“It does look like we’ll be above average, temperatures at least in the 40s, maybe 50s,” Moore said on Wednesday, just three days after subzero temperatures pummeled the area.

With still eight days until Christmas, the forecasts closer to Dec. 25 might bump the expected high temps up even into the 60s, Moore said.

Normal temperatures this time of year for Lafayette are 36 for a high and 22 for a low.

“It looks like you might be able to keep your heavy winter jackets in the closet for now,” Moore said.

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How will a Christmas with temperatures in the 40s, 50s or even 60s compare to Christmases past?

In 1982, Lafayette’s record-warm Christmas was 64 degrees. Its record cold temperature was 12 below zero in 2000.

So now that the dreams of a white Christmas appear dashed, what about January or February?

The Climate Prediction Center published a three-month forecast in November, and an update is expected in the next couple of days.

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But last month, center’s forecast for January, February and March was for Hoosiers to have an equal chance of above and/or below average temperatures.

“We’ll see how that translates with the storm track,” Moore said.

The Climate Prediction Center forecasts warmer than normal temperatures in the southern United States and below normal temperatures in the Northern Plains.

“That puts the storm track right through Indiana, which makes sense because the Climate Prediction Center has Indiana as a bullseye for a pattern favoring above-normal precipitation,” Moore said. Temperatures will decide whether that precipitation falls as rain or snow — or ice or freezing rain.

Reach Ron Wilkins at rwilkins@jconline.com. Follow on Twitter: @RonWilkins2.

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Freshmen from Indiana show potential in UConn-Butler game: ‘Heck of a player’

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Freshmen from Indiana show potential in UConn-Butler game: ‘Heck of a player’


Former UConn forward, NBC Sports broadcaster Donny Marshall knows a thing or two about talented UConn guards.

The former Husky played for legendary coach Jim Calhoun and was teammates with the fifth pick in the 1996 NBA Draft, 10-time NBA All-Star Ray Allen. Watching UConn play against Butler on Tuesday night, Marshall said he sees a lot of Allen in reigning Indiana Mr. Basketball Braylon Mullins.

Mullins made the second start of his career against the Bulldogs. The former Greenfield-Central star missed UConn’s first six games of the regular season with an injury, but the 6-foot-6 guard is quickly coming into his own and showing why he’s a projected lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

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Against Butler, Mullins showed off his sweet jump shot, going 2 for 5 from 3-point range. He finished with 12 points, three rebounds, two assists, two blocks and one steal.

“He’s a scorer,” Butler coach Thad Matta said of Mullins. “He’s got a scorer’s mentality. He gets his shot off quick. They move him around and create some angles for him. Obviously, he’s a heck of a player.”

Mullins did most of his damage in the first half, scoring eight of his 12 points before halftime. The former five-star recruit was the highest-ranked player in UConn’s 2025 class. Butler’s top-ranked recruit, Azavier “Stink” Robinson isn’t the NBA prospect Mullins is, but he held his own after a shaky start to the game.

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Robinson has been thrust into the starting lineup with starter Jalen Jackson out for the season with an ankle injury. Robinson looked out of sorts at times in the first half, going scoreless with two assists and a turnover. In the second half, Matta moved him off the ball, giving him catch-and-shoot looks, and opportunities to drive to the basket without worrying about running the offense.

The former Lawrence North star responded with one of the better halves of his career, scoring 10 points on 3 for 6 shooting, including 2 for 5 from 3 to go along with two rebounds, one assist, one steal and one turnover.

Facing a veteran team like UConn, nothing comes easy. UConn’s guards harass ball handlers and getting into an offensive set is not easy. This time last year, Robinson was still in high school and, on most nights, the most athletic player on the court. Playing a UConn team where the goal is a national championship, Robinson was forced to grow, and he did not back down from the challenge in the second half.

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“He’s coming along,” Matta said of Robinson. “That’s the first Big East road game of his career against maybe the best team in the country. It tells you how tough he is. He’s resilient. He keeps going.”



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Indiana's Curt Cignetti becomes the first back-to-back winner of AP coach of the year

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Indiana's Curt Cignetti becomes the first back-to-back winner of AP coach of the year


Curt Cignetti has been named The Associated Press coach of the year in college football for the second consecutive season. He is the first coach to win the award back-to-back since it was first presented in 1998. Cignetti has led Indiana to unprecedented success, with a 24-2 record over two seasons. The Hoosiers are 13-0 this year, Big Ten champions for the first time since 1967, and the top seed in the College Football Playoff. Cignetti received 47 first-place votes. Texas Tech’s Joey McGuire and Vanderbilt’s Clark Lea received two each, and Virginia’s Tony Elliott got one.



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