鈥楽ight Unseen鈥
Editor鈥檚 Note:
This story is personal.
I was born with albinism and am visually impaired. As a child, I was a participant in West Virginia University鈥檚 Children鈥檚 Vision Rehabilitation Program. The tools, support, and community provided through CVRP played a meaningful role in my development and independence.
Covering the screening of Sight Unseen and revisiting CVRP was both a professional assignment and a moment of reflection. Seeing today鈥檚 children 鈥 some navigating the same challenges I once faced 鈥 offered a powerful reminder of how far this program reaches and why its work matters.
This story is told not only through my experience, but through the voices of the students and professionals who continue to shape CVRP鈥檚 impact across West Virginia.
As the lights dimmed inside the Erickson Alumni Center, the room settled into a rare stillness 鈥 one filled not with silence, but with understanding.
For many in attendance, the Jan. 23 screening of 鈥淪ight Unseen,鈥 a new documentary highlighting West Virginia University鈥檚 Children鈥檚 Vision Rehabilitation Program (CVRP), was an opportunity to witness the lives of blind and visually impaired youth across the state. For others, it was a reflection of years of support, advocacy and quiet victories.
For this journalist, it felt like stepping into a time machine.
As children with albinism moved through the room 鈥 one young boy in particular 鈥 it was impossible not to reflect on the long road behind and the distance traveled since childhood. The smiles, the nervous energy, the confidence still forming 鈥 all of it echoed familiar moments. The sense of belonging inside that room was unmistakable.
CVRP, housed within the WVU Eye Institute and the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences in Morgantown, W.Va., has been doing this work for nearly three decades.
Established in 1996, the Children鈥檚 Vision Rehabilitation Program is a needs-based initiative serving blind and visually impaired school-aged children across West Virginia. The program provides comprehensive services regardless of a family鈥檚 ability to pay, offering clinical vision evaluations, assistive technology, orientation and mobility training, occupational therapy, educational recommendations, summer camps, parent support, and follow-up services throughout the state.
What began with evaluations of six children in its first year has grown to serving more than 100 children annually 鈥 with a waiting list that underscores the program鈥檚 continued demand, particularly in rural communities.
Rebecca Coakley, program director of CVRP, said the documentary grew from a desire to finally tell those stories.
鈥淭his started about two years ago while I was in Guatemala,鈥 Coakley said. 鈥淭here was a film director there working on another project, and he said, 鈥榃e鈥檝e got to tell this story.鈥 He followed our kids for about 18 months, and what we thought might be an informational film became something much bigger.鈥
That film, 鈥淪ight Unseen,鈥 follows six primary CVRP students and examines how vision loss intersects with education, independence, family life, and 鈥 in many cases 鈥 challenges far beyond eyesight.
鈥淪ometimes blindness or visual impairment is not their most handicapping condition,鈥 Coakley said. 鈥淥ur kids are dealing with so many things, and this film shows just how capable they are.鈥
Michael Graziano, the documentary鈥檚 director, said the project evolved naturally as the stories unfolded.
鈥淥nce I got to know Becky, the CVRP team, and the kids, I realized this was an incredible story people needed to hear,鈥 Graziano said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 character-driven. There鈥檚 no smoke and mirrors. The hardest part was figuring out what to cut.鈥
Filmed over more than a year across West Virginia, 鈥淪ight Unseen鈥 focuses on resilience 鈥 not as inspiration, but as reality.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about people overcoming challenges that are part of the society they live in and the disabilities they carry,鈥 Graziano said. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 also about how one small group of people, with the right motivation, can make an incredible impact.鈥
For CVRP students like Drew Moorman, a high school student from Charleston, that impact is deeply personal.
鈥淐VRP has always been like a second home for me,鈥 Moorman said. 鈥淪ometimes I feel more at home there than with family or friends, because I don鈥檛 stick out. I鈥檓 equal. That鈥檚 what matters to me 鈥 equality.鈥
Moorman, who lives with multiple visual and medical conditions, said the event felt surreal.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 sleep much the night before,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 kept thinking, 鈥楾his isn鈥檛 imaginary anymore. It鈥檚 actually happening.'鈥
Miriam Beall, an orientation and mobility specialist with CVRP, said the screening was designed to highlight both progress and possibility.
鈥溾楽ight Unseen鈥 really shows how we鈥檙e trying to bridge the gap so students can be as independent as possible,鈥 Beall said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 emotional 鈥 there are sad moments, but also incredibly uplifting ones that show just how capable our kids are.鈥
CVRP鈥檚 mission is rooted in access 鈥 access to the visual environment, education, technology and independence. Its multidisciplinary team includes pediatric ophthalmology, low-vision specialists, occupational therapy, orientation and mobility experts, assistive technology professionals, and educators working together to meet each child鈥檚 individual needs.
Low vision, defined as visual impairment that cannot be corrected beyond 20/70, often presents unique challenges in classrooms designed around sight. For children who are legally blind 鈥 20/200 vision or worse 鈥 or blind with minimal light perception, those challenges are compounded.
CVRP exists to ensure those challenges are not faced alone.
The screening was not just a celebration of a documentary, but of a community 鈥 one that spans families, educators, clinicians and children learning to navigate the world on their own terms. Plans are in the works for the documentary to be hosted on a streaming service so that other interested parties and the general public may experience it, too.
For those who have walked that path before, the room felt full in a different way.
There was gratitude. There was pride. And there was a quiet understanding that programs like CVRP do more than rehabilitate vision 鈥 they help children see themselves clearly.
And sometimes, they give adults the chance to look back and recognize just how far they鈥檝e come, just as I did.




