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GUIDING SUCCESS: WORKING WITH STUDENTS WHO ARE DEAF OR HARD OF HEARING Presented by Jason Anderson & Jen Hayes.

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Presentation on theme: "GUIDING SUCCESS: WORKING WITH STUDENTS WHO ARE DEAF OR HARD OF HEARING Presented by Jason Anderson & Jen Hayes."— Presentation transcript:

1 GUIDING SUCCESS: WORKING WITH STUDENTS WHO ARE DEAF OR HARD OF HEARING Presented by Jason Anderson & Jen Hayes

2 JASON ANDERSON DEAF & HARD-OF-HEARING ADVISOR Why am I here?

3 JEN HAYES, BS, NIC

4 How many of you have worked with a student who is Deaf or Hard of Hearing in the past? How many of you have no experience with Deaf or Hard of Hearing students?

5 WHY IS THIS WORKSHOP IMPORTANT? Understand D/HH student Demographic Provide tools for D/HH interaction Understand importance of cross-campus collaboration

6  Acceptable Terminology  Hard of Hearing  Deaf/deaf  Late deafened  Terminology to Avoid  Hearing Impaired  Deaf & Dumb  Deaf-Mute

7 D/HH STUDENT DIVERSE BACKGROUNDS  Language Preferences  Hearing aids/ALD  Cochlear Implant  Profoundly Deaf  Hearing loss  Deaf +

8 D/HH STUDENT IDENTITY  Culturally Deaf (Deaf)  Not culturally Deaf (deaf)  Ethnic/Racial Diversity  Embarrassed about hearing loss  Unsure of identity

9 D/HH STUDENT EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCES (PRIOR TO COLLEGE)  Mainstream Public School  Deaf Residential School  Mixed Educational Experiences  Common Educational Struggles  English  Lack of Support  Lack of opportunity for Incidental Learning

10 TRANSITION TO COLLEGE  What are some common obstacles you think deaf and hard of hearing students experience in their transition to college?  Accessibility  Meeting with Advisors  Using campus resources wisely  Choosing a Major  Selecting a Career  Developing as a Professional  Developing as an Individual

11 ACCESSING ADVISING Current Student Experience Possible Solutions  Appointment Scheduling  Interpreter Requests  Walk in VS Pre-schedule  Self-Advocacy Experience  Sensitive to availability of interpreter  Ask all students- do you require an accommodation?  Include on forms  Staff hires the interpreter

12 D/HH INTERACTIONS Current Student Experience Possible Solutions  Staff are inexperienced with service providers  Unfamiliar with d/hh interactions  Talking Loud  Over- enunciating  Assumption about lip reading  Assumption about ASL  Learn how to work with service providers  Pen & Paper  Texting  Typing in a Word Document  Ask all students for their communication preferences  Work closely with ARC

13 ACCESSING CAMPUS RESOURCES Current Student ExperiencePossible Solutions  Referral to D/HH Advisor  Be explicit with explanations and don’t make assumptions  Encourage students to get involved, explain why  Collaborate with staff who interface with D/HH students  Inadequate exposure to information  Lack of incidental learning  Rely on peers for information

14 CHOOSING A MAJOR & CAREER Current Student Experience Possible Solutions  Encourage students to DREAM BIG  If students want to pursue a “typical major” ask the student to reflect on :  What are the job prospects for you in that field?  How will you set yourself apart from other D/HH applicants?  Think about why an employer should choose YOU- plan for it.  D/HH students typically choose:  Deaf Education  ASL Studies  Graphic Design  Art & Design programs  Majors that lead to a job with minimal hearing community interaction

15 DEVELOP AS AN INDIVIDUAL Current Student ExperiencePossible Solutions  Encourage students to engage in campus activities and organizations  Cross-campus collaboration  Reach out to the D/HH students  Empower the students to advocate for themselves  Strong D/HH connections  Lack of Staff connections outside of D/HH advisor  Depend on D/HH Advisor to advocate on their behalf

16 DEVELOP AS PROFESSIONAL Current Student ExperiencePossible Solutions  College ≠ Job  Develop a plan with the student  Career focused  Emphasize practical experience  Refer to CDC  Review career preparation at each advising session  COLLE GE = JOB  Students are not always career focused  Don’t understand long-term effects of decisions made in college  Networking is limited

17 COLLABORATIVE SERVICE MODEL TO IMPROVE D/HH STUDENT EXPERIENCE Examples  Cross-department collaboration  Cross-organization collaboration  Community collaboration Outcomes for D/HH Students  Increased sense of connection to UWM  Increases retention  Development of networking opportunities  Improves eventual employment outcomes

18 RESOURCES  DVR- www.dwd.wi.govwww.dwd.wi.gov  Student Accessibility Center- www4.uwm.edu/sacwww4.uwm.edu/sac  Interpreter Training program- http://www4.uwm.edu/soe/academics/ex_ed/itp.cfm http://www4.uwm.edu/soe/academics/ex_ed/itp.cfm  American Sign Language Studies Program- http://www4.uwm.edu/soe/academics/ex_ed/asl-studies.cfm http://www4.uwm.edu/soe/academics/ex_ed/asl-studies.cfm  Pepnet- www.pepnet.orgwww.pepnet.org  Social Security Administration- www.ssa.govwww.ssa.gov  ADA- http://www.ada.govhttp://www.ada.gov  Center for Career Development- www4.uwm.edu/cdc/www4.uwm.edu/cdc/  Center for Community-Based Learning, Leadership, and Research- www4.uwm.edu/community/ www4.uwm.edu/community/  DSSHE- http://listserv.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=DSSHE-Lhttp://listserv.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=DSSHE-L

19 CONTACT INFORMATION  Jason Anderson  anders96@uwm.edu  414-937-5785  Jen Hayes  jrhayes@uwm.edu  414-229-4663 QUESTIONS?


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