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Technology Has Revolutionised Deaf Education

The teaching of children who are deaf or hard-of-hearing has altered with technologies like cochlear implants and speech-to-text tools, according to a recent report from Project Forum, at the National Association of State Directors of Special Education, in the US.

Read: Technology Has Changed The Teaching Of Deaf Students

Notable findings in the report include:

  1. Greater acceptance of deaf/hoh children by mainstream class teachers
  2. Trend toward classroom accommodations, not specialised teaching
  3. Decrease in the number of specialist schools for deaf children
  4. Decline in the use of sign-language
  5. Increased need for speech and language teachers for deaf children

Remaining challenges to address include:

  • Service delivery in rural areas (see IDK’s Telepractice posts)
  • Directed training for teachers and professional development
  • Shrinking budgets for supporting deaf/hard of hearing students
  • Need to improve relationships within the deaf/hoh community

 

The trends noted in this report are evident in Ireland, where mainstreaming for pupils who are deaf or hard-of-hearing was sanctioned in the 1994 Salamanca Statement (which Ireland ratified) and in the 2004 EPSEN Act.

Further Reading

  • New York Times: Budget Cuts Polarising Deaf Education
  • What Tertiary Supports Do Deaf Students Need?
  • What Exactly Does Oral-Deaf Education Involve?
  • Clarke School ‘Maps’ Changes In Deaf Education
Sep 15, 2011Team Sound Advice

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13 years ago 7 Comments Captions, Education, Hearing, Language Development, Telehealthaccess, book, books, budgets, child, children, classroom, cochlear, communication, concept, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, family, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, irish, ISL, IT, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, parent, parents, politics, preschool, read, reading, relationships, school, schools, shift, sign, social, speech, student, students, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, technology, training, visual, words559
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Sound Advice - formerly Irish Deaf Kids (IDK) - is an award-winning, for-impact venture geared to technology-supported mainstream education and living for deaf children and students.

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