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School 258

Listening And Speaking: A Link To Reading/Writing?

“Whether parents choose sign language, speech facilitated by implants or some combination, deaf children are exposed to language earlier than ever” Implants help deaf children learn language from listening A key message in this 4-page piece is, language is the vital focus for deaf children and can be acquired in different ways. One view is

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14 years ago 5 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, auditory-verbal, book, books, child, children, cochlear, communication, creche, deaf, deaf children talk, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, education, family, hearing, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, language, learn, learning, listen, listening, literacy, LSL, mainstream, parent, parents, preschool, read, reading, school, schools, siblings, social, speech, spoken, spoken language, talk, talking, teachers, technology, therapy, verbal, words

Parent Involvement In Child Education Is Essential

The parents of children who’re deaf need to be involved with their child’s education, at home and at school. Parent input to child education is cited by educators as one of the best ways to improve outcomes for all children and notably if other family members are involved. Statistically, educational attainment rises when parents participate in

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14 years ago 3 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, accessibility, accessible, Australia, book, books, CAP, child, children, Classroom Access Project, cochlear, communication, concept, education, family, hearing, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, new, new parent, parent, parents, preschool, read, reading, school, schools, sign, social, speech, student, students, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, technology, training, UDL, Universal Design for Learning, visual, words

Australia To Take Classroom Captioning ‘National’

Australia’s senate has approved funding for a National Schools Pilot Program of classroom captioning for students who are deaf and hard of hearing. The move follows classroom tests of the captioning system in the past year, with co-ordination from the respective state-level Departments of Education. Senator Fifield, who co-sponsored the move, said the provision was a

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14 years ago 3 Comments Captions, Education, Hearingaccess, accessibility, accessible, Australia, book, books, CAP, child, children, Classroom Access Project, communication, concept, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, read, reading, school, schools, sign, social, speech, student, students, support, teach, teaching, training, UDL, Universal Design for Learning, visual, words

Making Literacy And Classroom Tools Accessible

As everyday home, school and teaching content becomes digitised, more accessible literacy-learning tools are needed, particularly for younger children encountering spoken-language vocabulary and grammar structures for the first time. In 2010, “A Usability Guide to Intelligent Web Tools for the Literacy of Deaf People” was published in Italy. Several key points are noted: the age at which

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14 years ago 6 Comments Captions, Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, accessible, book, books, classroom, concept, content, device, devices, digital, digitised, e-learning, families, family, grammar, home, language, literacy, predominate, preschool, read, reading, reusable, school, schools, signed, social, software, structure, structures, syntax, teachers, technology, verbal, visual, vocabulary, web-based, words, writing

Deaf Children In The UK Face Teaching Cuts

Yesterday, an article on mainstream supports for deaf children in the UK (by Cathy Heffernan) ran in the UK’s Guardian broadsheet newspaper. Deaf pupils will bear the brunt of education cuts Eighty-five per cent of deaf pupils in the UK are mainstream-educated at present. Like in Ireland, these pupils, their families and school teachers draw vital

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14 years ago 1 Comment Hearingclassmates, classroom, coaching, cuts, education, families, family, focus, hours, inclusion, inclusive, integrate, integrated, integration, mainstream, number, numbers, parent, parents, ratio, resource, school, support, system, training, tutor, tutoring, visiting teacher, visiting teachers, VTHI, VTOD

The Visiting Teacher Service: Background Details

What is a Visiting Teacher? Many parents of newly-confirmed deaf children ask this, on learning of the VT service from the Department of Education. Over 3,300 deaf and hard-of-hearing children at mainstream schools in Ireland, are supported by 32 visiting teachers working in 29 full-time posts. (PDF) Visiting Teachers for Children who are Deaf/Hard-of-Hearing Parents can

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14 years ago 11 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Developmentbaby, child, children, choices, communication, deelopment, department, department of education, DES, early, education, family, guidance, information, informed choice, intervention, language, mainstream, NCCE, options, preschool, school, schools, speech, support, teach, teacher of deaf, teacher of the deaf, teaching, TOD, visiting teacher, visiting teacher of the deaf, visiting teacher service, vocabulary, VTHI, VTOD

Publication Of HSE South Audiology Review 2009

A total of 1,786 children in Ireland’s Health Service Executive (HSE) South region have waited two to three years for a first hearing-assessment, with five children waiting two months for the first fitting of a hearing-aid. Sixteen minors in the region, aged from two to sixteen years old, also were not detected as having mild

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14 years ago 3 Comments Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaudiologist, audiology, case, child, cochlear, communication, deaf, deafness, diagnosed, diagnosis, difficulty, education, family, hearing, hearing aid, hearing-aids for children, how to get a hearing test, HSE, hse south audiology review, incorrect, list, mild, moderate, national, older, parent, parents, profound, provision, review, school, schools, screening, service, services, severe, shortcoming, shortfall, test, waiting

Newborn Hearing Tests Start In Cork This Month

On April 26th, phase one of a national newborn hearing testing programme in Ireland will begin in Cork, with national roll-out expected by end-2012. The HSE assigned just under EUR2 million for the programme in its 2011 plan, with a view to expansion across the HSE South region at end-2011. Ireland has about 74,000 births

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14 years ago 4 Comments Hearing, Language Developmentaudiologist, audiology, baby, care, child, children, cochlear, communication, concept, Cork, deaf, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, develop, development, early, family, hearing, hearing test for babies, hospital, HSE, implant, intervention, Ireland, irish, language, learn, learning, maternity, neonatal hearing, newborn, parent, parents, pathway, pathways, preschool, read, reading, school, screen, screening, sign, social, speech, support, teach, teacher, teachers, technology, test, testing babies hearing, UNHS, university, visual, vocabulary, words

Meeting And Greeting New People – IDK Workshop

IDK’s “Meet and Greet” workshop for teenagers on April 2nd in Portlaoise, welcomed attendees from counties Donegal, Waterford, Dublin and Carlow. After introductions, the morning session was opened by Mike Rossney, the first presenter, who mentioned his own securities when moving to secondary school. He then coached the teens in their technique when meeting new

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14 years ago Hearingaccess, block, cochlear, colleague, colleagues, communication, concept, confidence, employee, employer, family, frustration, greet, hearing, insights, Ireland, learn, learning, life, meet, misunderstanding, office, perception, read, reading, school, schools, self, sign, skills, social, speech, student, students, teach, teachers, teaching, team, teen, teenage, themself, themselves, training, visual, words, workplace, workshop, workshops

UNHS: Obligatory, Voluntary Or Not Necessary?

In November 2010, Dr. Monika Lehnhardt, who established Cochlear Europe in Basel in 1987, published a new study about the importance of UNHS. Her research showed around 5,000 babies are born deaf in the EU per year, with another 5,000-10,000 having hearing issues that need intervention. Apart from these statistics, deafness is not visible, and can affect a child’s

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14 years ago 3 Comments Hearingchild, children, cochlear, communication, concept, deaf, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, family, hearing, Ireland, irish, language, learn, learning, newborn, parent, parents, preschool, read, reading, school, screening, sign, social, speech, support, teach, teacher, teachers, UNHS
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