Truemag

  • Hearing
    • Ears
      • Glue Ear
    • Hearing Loss
    • Hearing Aids
    • Cochlear Implants
    • Hearing and Speech
    • MidLifers + Seniors
  • Connectivity
  • Parents
    • Child Assessments
    • Informed Choices
    • Child Audiology
    • Audiograms
    • Parent Stories
    • Agencies + Advice
  • Communication
    • Speech + Lipreading
    • Reading + Language
    • Bilingualism
    • Irish Sign Language
  • Schooling
    • Education Plans
    • Teachers
    • Creche + Preschool
    • Literacy
    • School Subjects
    • Peer Issues
    • Study + Work
  • News
    • Media
    • Blog
  • Home
  • Contact
  • About
    • What We Do
    • Caroline’s Bio
    • Social Impact
    • Gratitude
    • Testimonials
  • Get Involved
  • FAQ

What Tertiary Supports Do Deaf Students Need?

Statistically, more deaf and hard-of-hearing students are enrolling in mainstream third-level institutions in the US (Raue & Lewis, 2011). The same is happening in Ireland, with more students in this diverse deaf population accessing higher education than ever before.

Tertiary education supports students who:

  • have hearing aids and use their residual hearing
  • have a cochlear implant (CI) and use auditory-verbal strategies
  • have a CI and use sign language, plus auditory-verbal strategies
  • use sign language only

Staff at tertiary institutions in the US need knowledge and skills to deliver accessible learning experiences in their classrooms (Lang, 2002). Under US federal guidelines, third-level staff must be trained to identify the best type of learning and/or communication supports for a particular student’s needs.

Tertiary learning/communication options include:

  1. digital captioning or note-taking services
  2. ad-verbatim live text-captioning (CART or C-Print)
  3. assistive listening devices (FM systems or soundfields)
  4. oral transliteration services (palantyping)
  5. sign language transliteration (video may be used)
  6. generic interpreting and transcription services

Access officers in the US must be familiar with accommodations for students who are deaf or hard of hearing (Cawthon, Nichols, & Collier, 2009). Their counterparts in Ireland are catching up, with greater awareness paying off.

Insights from the US, for student needs:

Students who are deaf or hard of hearing have specific communication and language needs that require different accommodations for success in education settings. Decisions about supports should be made on an individual basis (Marschark, 2001; U.S. Department of Education, 2005).

Deaf and hard of hearing students entering the workforce need basic skills for job training or other programs. Researchers found gaps in employment and life skills when reviewing transition strengths and needs of high school students in the US, who were deaf or hard of hearing (Luft & Huff, 2011).

In both the US and in Ireland, student access to tertiary education may be provided by inducted entities or public agencies such as secondary schools, vocational or community agencies and centres for independent living.

Further Reading

  • ‘Disability Law News’ Blog Cites IDK’s Advocacy
  • Tutorial Captioning Benefits Deaf Students’ Access
  • Captioning: A Lifeline At Conferences and Seminars
  • A Little Bit Of History From Trinity College, Dublin
Aug 31, 2011Team Sound Advice

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)
New School Year - A Quick Reference ListAfter A Cochlear Implant - The Real Work Begins
Comments: 0

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

13 years ago 7 Comments Captions, Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, accessibility, accessible, college, courses, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, earn, earning, education, environment, inclusion, inclusive, income, Ireland, irish, ISL, learn, learning, life, literacy, living, mainstream, options, post, post secondary, post-primary, post-school, primary, school, schools, secondary, sector, sign, skills, social, speech, student, students, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, tertiary, third, third-level, training, university, visual, vocational, wage, wages, words, work, workforce, workplace208
Get our Monthly e-Zine
Archives
eBook: Teaching A Deaf Child To Hear And Speak

Teaching A Deaf Child To Listen Cover

Edited by Caroline Carswell

StatCounter Page Visits
About

Sound Advice

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.

Sound Advice

Categories
  • Captions (165)
  • Education (407)
  • Hearing (633)
  • Language Development (278)
  • Smartphones (87)
  • Telehealth (82)
Archives
Get our Monthly e-Zine
© 2023 Sound Advice. Sound Advice is registered in Ireland as a sole trader (CRO 506131). © 2007 - 2014 Irish Deaf Kids. Company No. 462323 | CHY 18589