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#32 (permalink) |
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Registered User
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I have both deaf kids an a hearing child. and i honestly spend more time paying attention to my deaf childrens education than my hearing child's education. my reasons? because I know if i don't catch a problem with my hearing child's education, someone else will. there are so few people looking out for deaf students... its accually kind of sad...
and another point. I have NEVER had to fight to get a good education for a hearing child. you have to claw your way in to get a good education for the deaf it seems. and parents that don't sign to their kids? SHAME ON THEM! all a child ever wants is their parent's attention. what better way than to have conversations about what bugs do and why flowers bloom?
__________________
you should never try to change perfection.
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#33 (permalink) | |
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So NOT a Princess!
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Have you talked with the parent? You could say something like " Hearing aids and being able to listen is important. I grew up that way and am happy that I can hear and have the abilty to hear and talk. But, what they don't tell you is that having an exclusive "oral and listening only" approach can have quite a bit of downsides. Yes, I know that they prolly have told you that things have changed.......but I see a lot of the same stuff happening to the young dhh kids of today. Definitly continue with the aids and other auditory stimulation things.....those will benifit your baby. I'm not one of those extremists who is all "dhh kids should only do ASL. Rather maybe it might make your baby's life easier if they had access to a full toolbox. I mean for example, with ASL they'll be able to function both with and without their hearing aids. You can also point out, that if he learns ASL, her baby will be BILINGAL!!!! (I just really find it really funny that the same parents who shirk away from ASL for their dhh kids, would be the first on the bandwagon to enroll their kids in a bilingal program) |
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#34 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 12,575
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#35 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 12,575
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#37 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 37
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As a parent of a Deaf child you are told many things but you are NEVER told that your child will be just fine if they never learn to talk. I had to seek out Deaf adults and see for myself that Miss Kat will be just fine with ASL. That being said, the reason I belong to that site and the reason I have chosen to give her hearing aids and do speech/listening therapy is because it never hurts to offer. I am giving her the opportunity to develop some oral skills, but ASL will probably always be her primary language. |
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#39 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
![]() Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 11,365
Blog Entries: 1
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Quote:
![]() ![]() Nothing wrong with giving her an opportunity to develop oral skills. Important she has the full access to language for language development.
__________________
~Shel~
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#41 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 37
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Thank you all!
I have a friend who has 2 Deaf kids with CI's, (she was the first parent I ever met that I didn't want to smack) she had researched and decided that she wanted to give her children everything, so she implanted them and then used ASL (well, more like CASE, but COME ON, she tried!) at home. She has one child who is totally oral, she signs with him, but he refuses. He is mainstreamed at a local school. Her other child doesn't speak and attends the bi-bi school with my daughter now. She told me she wished she had been brave enough not to implant her kids. She told me she still looks at them and cries, she told me that we "are the family we wished she had been strong enough to be". That was a huge compliment because by all outside observers her son is exactly what people think all Deaf people should become. He is mainstreamed and a hearing/speaking child....and is mother wishes he would sign |
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#42 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 12,575
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My own son is now 22, is a college student with a 3.5 GPA, and has oral skills if he needs them. He prefers sign. He is happy and well adjusted. If he wants to be implanted, he is free to make that decision. However, because he was raised with an environment that gave him skills in both languages, and the ability to achieve no matter the environment he finds himself in, he does not see how an implant would improve the quality of his life. He chooses not to be implanted at this time. |
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#44 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 12,575
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No doubt. And it was easier for him to acquire language in the manner that was most natural for him. It was easier for him to find his identity when he had role models and others around him who supported who he was, rather than having to pretend to be something he wasn't. Was it easier to raise a deaf child without an implant. Heck, it isn't easy to raise any child! LOL.
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#45 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
![]() Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 11,365
Blog Entries: 1
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Quote:
__________________
~Shel~
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#48 (permalink) | |
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So NOT a Princess!
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The key is: Make it FUN! The trouble with speech therapy is that it can get very tedius and boring. Don't over therapize her aquastion of oral skills. Also, don't be afraid to supplement with private therapy, such as some auditory-verbal therapy. You could go and see the speech therapist at your daughter's school, and see what they say, and if they have any ideas or anything. |
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