Download Chapter 10: Students with deafness and hearing loss

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Specific language impairment wikipedia , lookup

Sign language wikipedia , lookup

Earplug wikipedia , lookup

Video relay service wikipedia , lookup

Telecommunications relay service wikipedia , lookup

Deaf culture wikipedia , lookup

Noise-induced hearing loss wikipedia , lookup

Hearing loss wikipedia , lookup

Sensorineural hearing loss wikipedia , lookup

Audiology and hearing health professionals in developed and developing countries wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Chapter 10: Students
with deafness and
hearing loss
S
Definitions
S Hearing impairment – not “deafness”
S In order to receive services, the hearing impairment must
adversely affect educational performance
S Deafness – child is severely impaired, cannot process
linguistic information through hearing….
Deaf culture
S Members of deaf community who embrace deaf culture.
S Deaf culture 1) deafness 2) using ASL 3) attending a
residential school for deaf
S Fundamental idea: deafness is not a disability, not
something that needs to be fixed
S Identity with it’s own rich history, traditions and language
S (conferences, dances, etc…)
Types:
S Hearing loss present at birth: congenital
S Hearing loss that develops after birth: acquired
S (Was loss pre-lingual or post lingual – has the child ever
heard spoken language?)
Causes
S Prematurity, intrauterine infection, maternal diabetes,
toxemia, anoxia, malformation of ear (prelingual)
S Meningitis, ear infections, encephalitis, head injury, extreme
exposure to loud noises
Issues
S Deaf parents vs. hearing parents
S Communication
S Academic issues
S Social/Emotional Characteristics
S Behavior Characteristics
The IEP
S Needs to include (diagnosis, severity of hearing loss,
strengths, things child needs work on ).
S Also: Preferred communication needs of child/family
S Linguistic needs, academic needs
S Social, emotional, and cultural needs (opportunities for peer
interaction/communication)
Whatever the educational
situation, it is important that:
S Student is developing age appropriate communication skills
S Student is making satisfactory progress
S Student has friends
S Student has access to all components of the educational
process (lunch, recess, social activities)
Transition/adulthood
Transition/planning skills so important! These are smart kids,
but they are sometimes underemployed, underestimated,
and have untapped potential!
(job shadowing, apprenticeships, career fairs, providing great
role models are so important!)
Important!
S Deaf/hard of hearing teachers so important!
When thinking about the perspectives of parents/families,
know that you cannot know exactly what they are going
through unless you are in the parents’ “shoes”.
Trends and Issues
S Universal newborn hearing screening – most infants hearing
screened for congenital hearing loss before they leave
hospital
S Cochlear implants (allows those with profound hearing loss
to perceive sound)
Deaf culture debate…
S Residential/charter schools with bilingual/bicultural
approach (ASL as primary language – English taught as
second language through reading – print)
Websites:
S http://nichcy.org/disability/specific/hearingloss
S http://www.asha.org/public/hearing/disorders/children.ht
m
S RIT.edu and the National Technical Institute for the Deaf
S Gallaudet University