ACVREP O&M Exam Actual Exam 2026/2027 |
Complete Test Bank with Verified Questions &
Detailed Answers | Orientation & Mobility
Specialist Certification Prep | A+ Graded
SECTION 1: HUMAN DEVELOPMENT & PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS
Q1: An O&M specialist begins working with a 75-year-old client who has recently lost vision
due to age-related macular degeneration. The client expresses frustration and repeatedly states,
"I'm too old to learn this cane stuff. I'll just stay home." What is the MOST appropriate initial
approach for the O&M specialist?
A. Respect the client's wishes and discharge them from services
B. Provide intensive cane training to quickly build confidence and independence
C. Acknowledge the client's feelings and explore the meaning and impact of vision loss before
beginning instruction. [CORRECT]
D. Refer the client to a support group and return in 3 months when they are more ready
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: For clients with recent adventitious vision loss, particularly older adults,
acknowledging the psychosocial impact of vision loss and exploring their feelings is essential
before beginning skill instruction. Building rapport and addressing emotional adjustment (C)
establishes trust and lays the foundation for successful O&M training. Discharging (A) or
delaying services (D) abandons the client. Intensive training (B) without addressing emotional
readiness may increase frustration and resistance.
Q2: A 6-year-old child with congenital blindness is beginning O&M services. The specialist
observes that the child frequently engages in repetitive rocking behaviors and has limited
exploration of the environment. According to developmental theories, which factor is MOST
likely contributing to this behavior?
A. The child is demonstrating typical 6-year-old attention-seeking behavior
B. Lack of sensory stimulation and reduced environmental feedback has limited motivation for
exploration [CORRECT]
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C. The child has an intellectual disability unrelated to the visual impairment
D. The rocking behavior indicates the child is not ready for O&M instruction
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Children with congenital blindness often exhibit reduced exploratory behavior due to
lack of visual feedback and limited sensory stimulation that typically motivates sighted children
to investigate their environment. The rocking (self-stimulation) compensates for reduced sensory
input. Understanding this developmental impact (B) guides the specialist to provide structured,
engaging sensory experiences to build environmental curiosity before formal O&M skills.
Q3: An O&M specialist is working with a teenager who lost vision at age 14 due to retinitis
pigmentosa. The teen refuses to use a cane in public, stating "People will think I'm weird."
Which psychosocial concept BEST explains this resistance?
A. The teen is experiencing denial about the permanence of vision loss
B. The teen is struggling with identity formation and social stigma associated with visible
disability [CORRECT]
C. The teen lacks understanding of cane technique benefits
D. The teen is demonstrating oppositional defiant behavior typical of adolescence
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Adolescence involves critical identity formation and heightened sensitivity to peer
perception. For teens with adventitious vision loss, visible assistive devices like canes may
trigger fears of social stigma and threaten their developing self-concept. Addressing identity and
social concerns (B) through peer mentoring and discrete technique options is more effective than
assuming denial (A) or defiance (D).
Q4: A 45-year-old client with diabetic retinopathy also has peripheral neuropathy affecting
sensation in the hands and feet. When planning O&M instruction, the specialist should FIRST
consider:
A. The client will be unable to learn any cane techniques due to reduced hand sensation
B. The client's foot numbness increases fall risk and requires modified gait assessment and safety
protocols [CORRECT]
C. The client's vision loss is less significant than the neuropathy
D. The client should avoid walking outdoors entirely
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Peripheral neuropathy compromises proprioception and tactile feedback from the
feet, significantly increasing fall risk during travel. The O&M specialist must prioritize safety by
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conducting thorough gait analysis, considering footwear recommendations, and potentially
modifying techniques (B). Neuropathy requires adaptation, not service termination (A, D).
Q5: An O&M specialist is working with a family from a culture where disability is viewed as a
family shame. The parents hide their 10-year-old child's cane and discourage community travel.
Which approach demonstrates cultural competence?
A. Report the parents to child protective services for neglect
B. Educate the parents that their cultural views are harmful to the child's development
C. Explore the family's cultural beliefs respectfully and collaborate to find solutions that honor
both safety and cultural values [CORRECT]
D. Focus only on in-home mobility to avoid family conflict
Correct Answer: C
**Cultural competence requires understanding how cultural frameworks shape attitudes toward
disability. Collaborating with families (C) to find culturally responsive solutions—such as
discrete travel times or reframing the cane as a "walking stick"—builds trust and sustainable
outcomes. Imposing Western disability perspectives (B) or avoiding community integration (D)
fails the child's long-term needs.
Q6: A 70-year-old client with glaucoma and early-stage dementia is living alone. During O&M
assessment, the client becomes disoriented in a familiar hallway. The specialist should:
A. Immediately recommend institutional placement
B. Recognize that progressive cognitive decline requires simplified, repetitive instruction and
environmental modifications [CORRECT]
C. Focus only on vision rehabilitation and refer dementia concerns elsewhere
D. Discontinue O&M services as the client cannot benefit
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Dual sensory and cognitive impairment requires integrated intervention. Simplified,
consistent instruction with environmental supports (memory markers, routine pathways) can
maintain functional independence (B). Premature institutionalization (A) or service
discontinuation (D) violates the principle of maximizing remaining capacity.
Q7: According to Erikson's stages of psychosocial development, a middle-aged adult
experiencing vision loss may struggle with which developmental crisis?
A. Trust vs. Mistrust
B. Identity vs. Role Confusion
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C. Generativity vs. Stagnation [CORRECT]
D. Integrity vs. Despair
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Middle adulthood (40s-60s) centers on generativity (contributing to society,
mentoring, productivity) versus stagnation. Vision loss threatening career, parenting, or
community roles creates a generativity crisis. O&M specialists should address how travel
independence supports continued generative engagement (C), not assume elderly developmental
tasks (D).
Q8: A 5-year-old with Leber congenital amaurosis demonstrates "blindisms" including eye
pressing and light gazing. The O&M specialist understands these behaviors:
A. Indicate the child has severe cognitive impairment
B. Are self-stimulatory responses to limited visual input and should be redirected through
alternative sensory activities [CORRECT]
C. Prove the child has some functional vision that should be utilized
D. Require behavioral suppression before O&M instruction can begin
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: "Blindisms" are stereotypical behaviors providing sensory feedback when visual
input is absent or severely limited. Rather than suppression, offering alternative sensory channels
(auditory, tactile, proprioceptive activities) redirects these needs constructively (B). These
behaviors do not indicate cognitive level (A) or functional vision (C).
Q9: An O&M specialist is working with a veteran who lost vision in combat and exhibits
symptoms of PTSD (hypervigilance, startle response, avoidance of crowds). Which
environmental consideration is MOST important?
A. Avoid all busy environments permanently
B. Begin instruction in quiet, controllable settings with gradual exposure to challenging stimuli
while teaching coping strategies [CORRECT]
C. Focus only on indoor mobility to prevent triggering
D. Require the veteran to confront crowded environments immediately to build resilience
Rationale: Trauma-informed O&M practice recognizes that hypervigilance and sensory
overload are common in PTSD. Graduated exposure with coping strategies (B) respects
neurological trauma responses while building skills. Permanent avoidance (A, C) limits
independence; forced confrontation (D) retraumatizes.