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Cindy Neil, M.Ed Manitoba Education, Deaf and Hard of Hearing Unit © Cindy Neil.

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Presentation on theme: "Cindy Neil, M.Ed Manitoba Education, Deaf and Hard of Hearing Unit © Cindy Neil."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Cindy Neil, M.Ed Manitoba Education, Deaf and Hard of Hearing Unit © Cindy Neil

3  Are you ready for a Surprise Test?  Hearing Loss 101 Lingo Anatomy Audiograms  Deaf and Hard of Hearing Friendly Classroom  How can I best teach this kid?  IEP considerations/goals  Final Exam © Cindy Neil

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5 Column C: Sound through a hearing aid Column B:Wax in ears or severe cold Column A:moderate high frequency loss

6 © Cindy Neil Column A Moderate High Frequency Loss Column B Wax or Bad Cold Column C With Hearing Aids 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

7 Terms  Hard of Hearing  deaf  Deaf  (Hearing impaired) Incidence  10% of the population © Cindy Neil

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9 How We Hear  Sound arrives at outer ear and travels down ear canal...  Causes ear drum and 3 bones to vibrate...  Vibrations enter cochlea and wave hair cells...  Hair cells convert wave to electric energy, send to brain...  I heard that! © Cindy Neil and Hallenbeck

10  Fluid in ears  no external ear and/or ear canal  ruptured ear drum, or damaged bones  Students with this loss may still have hearing aids. © Cindy Neil

11  damage to the auditory nerve and/or cochlea.  permanent.  message is unclear before it gets to the brain.  Hearing aids/cochlear implants make an incomplete message louder, which does not cure. © Cindy Neil Normal Damaged

12 © Cindy Neil

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14  Above the line = cannot hear  Below the line = can hear  Close to the line = fuzzy area  How does line travel through speech banana? Informs: phonics spelling Grammar speech © Cindy Neil

15 Audiogram 101  Results obtained in optimal conditions  Top: pitch (think piano)  Side: volume (quiet down to loud)  Place where pitch/loudness meet forms a liine – ‘shape’ of loss

16  Age hearing loss began - before or after speech - stable or progressive  Degree and shape of the loss  Age when amplification started – use  Intervention received  Presence of other conditions - cognitive, physical  Student motivation and innate ability © Cindy Neil

17  “I heard that” versus “I understood that”  Louder does not mean clearer. (Think about cranking up radio).  In general, the more significant the loss, the greater the difficulties. © Cindy Neil

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19 Hearing Aids © Cindy Neil

20 Cochlear Implants © Cindy Neil

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24 Without FM – What word did the teacher say? © Cindy Neil

25 Without FM – What word did the teacher say? With FM – Important! The child can no longer hear his/her classmates! © Cindy Neil

26 010203040 Distance from talker’s mouth in feet Speech level: loud down to quiet 20 40 60 80 100 © Cindy Neil

27 0 Reverberation 3040 20 40 60 80 100 © Cindy Neil

28 https://www.youtu be.com/watch?v= ufGlBv8Z3NU

29  Lighting Considerations  Speechreading  ASL Interpreting  Computerized Note-taking  Peer Notetaking  Visual Teaching Strategies © Cindy Neil

30  Face the class  Stop talking when writing on board  Preferential seating  (not always front and center!)  Circular or semi- circular seating arrangements for groups © Cindy Neil

31  Schedules/agendas posted  Key words  Demonstrations, pictures, charts, graphs  Technology  Visual dictionary © Cindy Neil

32  Planning ahead is very important for people with hearing loss.  For an example- Tomorrow we will be starting a new unit about Egyptians © Cindy Neil

33  Oral - auditory oral - auditory verbal  American Sign Language  Combination of oral and ASL  Augmentative communication © Cindy Neil

34 Difficulties occur with:  Vocabulary and concepts  Grammatical structures  Abstract concepts (time concepts, implied meaning, multiple meanings, inferences, idioms)  Level of Language of instruction Loss of incidental language learning experiences are reflected in all aspects of the curriculum. © Cindy Neil

35  Reading comprehension  Reading vs. Decoding  Written expression – form, content  Higher level thinking skills – receptive and expressive reasoning  Generalization of knowledge  Study skills © Cindy Neil

36  Behavioral Expectations  Out of the Loop  Self-Esteem  Identity  Isolation © Cindy Neil

37  Provide Deaf/Hard of Hearing friendly environment  Help the student develop problem solving strategies  Help peers understand hearing loss and communication needs  Support friendships  Deaf  Hard of Hearing  Hearing © Cindy Neil

38 Provide opportunities for students to:  Learn about their hearing loss, develop appropriate coping strategies  Participate in DHH Get Togethers, Networking Days, Deaf Centre Manitoba events  Learn about Deaf culture, Hard of Hearing culture  Learn about community resources, SMD summer programs, job training, Deaf Resource Centre, university / college supports © Cindy Neil

39  Get attention before speaking  Ensure quiet background  One speaker at a time  Rephrase, repeat, provide a visual cue  Use open ended questions vs. yes/no  Provide frequent comprehension checks © Cindy Neil

40  Identify speaker, repeat information  Identify topic, visual cue to indicate change of topic (agenda)  Re-cap information © Cindy Neil

41  Encourage quiet in class  Carpeting  Hush-ups, Flexi-Felts on chairs  Soft surfaces – curtains, fabric room dividers  Close classroom door, windows  Seat student away from noise sources (pencil sharpener, heating vent, etc.)  Work in quieter environment © Cindy Neil

42  Language  Listening skills  Basic concepts  Academics © Cindy Neil

43  Social skills  Independence  Self-Advocacy Establish priorities: Focus on a few key goals. © Cindy Neil

44  Listen to a story.  Answer comprehension questions after. © Cindy Neil

45  As long as you are trying, that is all that matters. It can make all the difference in the world!  Teach Advocacy!  Empowerment  Questions? © Cindy Neil


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