Suggestions for Teaching Students
with Hearing Impairment in a Regular
• . Promote the acceptance of the student in the
regular classroom
• Welcome the student to your class.
• Explain the student’s condition to the entire class.
• Make modifications.
• Accept the student as an individual with
disabilities and limitations; discuss the student’s condition with him or her.
2. Be sure that the prescribed
hearing aids and other amplification
devices are used.
•
understand and explain the use of hearing
aids
•
Check hearing aids
•
encourage the student to take care of his
hearing aids
•
Be sure if the student has spare battery at
school
3. Provide preferential
seating
•
Sit the students near the spot where you
typically teach
•
Sit the student where he can see you.
•
Sit the students away from source of noise
•
Sit the student when light is on you face
•
Sit the student where he can use the better
ear
•
Allow the student to transfer to other seats
4. Increase visual information
•
The student must see your lip
•
Try to stay in one place
•
Avaoid talking when your back is turned to
the class
•
Avoid covering your mouth
•
Be sure that the student can lipread you
•
Use visual aids, such as pictures and
illustrations
•
Demonstrate what you want the student to do
•
Use the chalkboard
5. Minimize classroom noise
•
Seat the student away from the noisy parts
of the classroom
•
Wait for the class to be quiet before
talking to the students
6. Modify teaching procedures.
•
Be sure that the student is watching and
listening when you are talking
•
Be sure the student understand what you said
•
Rephrase question and instruction whenever
possible
•
Write keywords, new words, and other needed
information on the chalkboard
•
Introduce new vocabulary words in advance
•
Assign a student as “buddy” to alert the
deaf student
7. Have realistic expectation
•
Remember his strenth and weaknesses
•
Be patient
•
Give the student a break from listening when
he shows sign of fatigue
ISSUES that AFFECTS HARD OF
HEARING HEARING, LATE DEAFENED AND ORAL DEAF PEOPLE
Access refers
to the ability to take advantage of all the resources that we encounter in our
normal lives. This includes entertainment, information, and social resources.Oral Communication is the BIG ISSUE for most hard of hearing, late deafened, and oral deaf people, because it is a fundamental capability that pervades a person's entire life. Communications problems increase the complexity and difficulty of many areas of a person's life.
Emergency Planning refers to the process of determining how emergencies will be dealt with. As you might imagine, people with hearing loss are often left out of the process, which means that their needs are ignored.
Employment is a source of many issues for people with hearing loss. There are issues with getting a job and keeping a job. Something as fundamental as getting essential information can become extremely difficult.
Family is generally a source of support, encouragement, and comfort. This is also the situation for many people with hearing loss. Unfortunately, many others don't have that kind of relationship with their family. Many hard of hearing, late deafened, and oral deaf people report significant issues with members of their family.
Hearing Aid Affordability is increasingly becoming a significant issue among people with hearing loss. As the cost of hearing aids skyrockets, fewer people are able to afford the aids that can help them retain personal communications. Fortunately, there is a growing movement to include hearing aids in insurance coverage.
Identity issues are common among people with hearing loss. They often consider themselves to be hearing people who can't hear. A few are able to successfully integrate into the culturally Deaf community, but the vast majority see themselves stuck between the hearing world and the Deaf world, and involved in neither.
Isolation is a frequent result of hearing loss. Movies, plays, and concerts may no longer be accessible. Chatting with friends can become frustrating and unrewarding, and the person with hearing loss may withdraw further into their shell.
Hearing aids fix hearing loss like glasses fix vision problems. People with hearing loss can hear when they want to. If you just talk louder, people with hearing loss will be able to understand you.
Services, or the lack thereof, are a source of frequent complaint among the hard of hearing, late deafened, and oral deaf people. Because their disability is generally invisible, they are often overlooked by organizations that provide services to disabled groups.
From "Introduction to Special Education" Ginez,et.al.
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