Careers

By Dan Burke, 6 December, 2025

Doug believes in himself as a blind teacher, and a future educator of blind kids. And you know what? He’ll pass that belief in himself and his students on to them, just by being Doug. Because kids love Doug!

- "The training and mentoring I received from blind instructors at the Colorado Center for the Blind has been invaluable,” says Doug. “It gave me the skills and confidence to believe in my abilities and embark on a new career path."

We believe in blind people like Doug. You can support the Colorado Center for the Blind’s positive impact rooted in that belief. Donate to Colorado Gives Day between now and December 9.

And the $25,000 match is still active, so giving now doubles your impact!

Doug wearing learning shades smiles as he looks at Julie laughing and holding a mic in one hand and a bell in the other.Waiting to receive his Freedom Bell, Doug (right) grins at something Director Julie Deden says about him during his graduation in July, 2025. He was about to start a new job with Littleton Public Schools and a graduate program at the University of Northern Colorado.

Colorado Gives Logo

By Dan Burke, 21 October, 2023

Business handshake

The Colorado Center for the Blind is presenting a dynamic career and college seminar on September 28. We’re sure to have something for everyone, whether you are looking for information about jobs and careers, planning for education and opportunities, or seeking inspiration from the journeys of successful blind people.

But the deadline to register is only days away, so please reserve your spot (and a lunch) right away. It’s all free!

Register online HERE by Sept. 25!

Date:

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Time:

10:00 AM to 3:00 PM

Register by:

Monday, September 25, 2023, 11:59 p.m.

Location:

By Dan Burke, 29 June, 2023

Five student participants have their Microbits plugged in to laptops and are working on coding. Two Instructors provide Assistance

It may have been the worst speech synthesis since, well, the VoTrax (circa 1987), but it sounded beautiful because this room full of blind students had coded their BBC Microbits themselves to produce that "Hello!”

It was all part of our two-day camp with Cyber.org's Project Access on coding/robotics here at the Colorado Center for the Blind. We had ten participants - a mix of middle and high school students and our younger Independence Training Program (ITP) students.

By Dan Burke, 10 October, 2022

A man on skis wearing a "Blind Skier" vest moves down a snowy slope at the direction of a guide behind him

It’s Colorado’s biggest online giving event of each year, and just about our biggest fund-raising event too! It’s on the news, in your email box – just about everywhere.

But just so you don’t forget, you can go online at https://www.coloradogives.org/donate/CoCenter and schedule a donation to roll over on December 6. That’s the day your gift will count toward our percentage of the $1 Million Incentive Fund for Colorado Gives Day!

By Dan Burke, 29 August, 2019

Nick crossing Shepperd Ave

You can’t keep Nicky out of the news. Glenwood Springs’s Nick Isenberg, who first attended our Seniors in Charge program and then came back to complete the Independence Training Program at age 73, is back in the news where he spent his professional career. This time it’s as “The Tactile Traveler”, the monthly radio program and podcast he launched on KDNK in Carbondale July 30.

KDNK is a public access radio station which, according to its web site, reaches over 100,000 listeners from Rifle to Leadville to Marble, as well as streaming on the web. Here’s what the web site says:

Nicky News Premiers “The Tactile Traveler” on KDNK Journalist Nick Isenberg applies his skills and experience to a new show that seeks to “empower blind and low vision people to explore the world and help the sighted to see the world in a new way.”

By Dan Burke, 8 March, 2019

Anahit, Kathy, Bill and Julie 2019

Let there be no doubt – students at the Colorado Center for the Blind form lifelong friendships. Monday, three such friends reunited at the center Kathy Kudlick, Bill Lundgren and Anahit LaBarre. They are shown above standing in front of our tactile CCB logo, left to right, Anahit, Kathy, Bill and Director Julie Deden.

All three were students at the same time, in fact, they began arriving shortly after our move to Littleton in August, 2000.

Kathy was first in October of that year. A professor of French History at the University of California-Davis at the time, she came ready to at last embrace her identity as a blind person. Today, she is Director of the Paul K. Longmore Institute on Disability at San Francisco State University.