Successful Loveland program aids deaf students

Miss-Delectable

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Successful Loveland program aids deaf students, 12/11/2010 - Reporter-Herald, Loveland, Colo.

Six-year-old Jordy Homack walked into Room 3 at Monroe Elementary School and jumped into Katrina Robertson’s lap.
The eyes of the two girls lit up, and they started communicating with American Sign Language.

Jordy asked Robertson, an 11th-grader at Loveland High School, about her cochlear implant, pointing to her own ear.

Marsha Dorr, one of Jordy’s teachers, said Jordy, who is deaf and nonverbal, is uncomfortable wearing the implant but thinks it’s “cool” to see an older student wearing one.

She sees that she is not the only one with hearing loss, she said.

Jordy is part of an after-school group for elementary-age students who are deaf or hard of hearing.

“When they come into this room, they’re the norm,” said Dorr, who works with deaf and hard-of-hearing students in preschool and grades K-5.

Eight students are in the group, which meets for two hours twice a month to do crafts, take field trips, work on communication skills and connect with high school students who went through Dorr’s hearing program while they were in elementary school.

“She developed an environment here where the kids feel like they have a home, a place they belong,” said Kim Miller, district audiologist. “It gives the kids a place to be themselves.”

On Thursday, students and staffers wore Santa hats while they made hand-print wreaths, ornaments and cards and frosted sugar cookies for a holiday party, working at different centers set up at tables in the classroom.

Dorr started off the nearly two-hour program by introducing the plans for the afternoon, followed by Happy-Sad, an activity in which the older and younger students describe a good event and not-so-good event from the previous week.

“It’s fun,” said Casey Latulip, a fourth-grader at Monroe. “You get to at least take a couple things home and share with your family.”

Dorr piloted the high school mentoring program this year to help her students realize they are not the only ones wearing a hearing aid or cochlear implant, she said.

“I think it definitely builds their self-esteem and confidence,” Dorr said.

The older students provide an example of how to stand up for themselves in the classroom, Dorr said.

“They become role models to the younger students,” Dorr said.

Robertson, who wants to become a preschool teacher, said she identifies with the younger students.

“I can help the kids work on what they need and (help them) improve their signing,” she said.
 
Jordy, who is deaf and nonverbal,
I think there needs to be a better word for dhh people who don't have oral abilty/skills. Unfortunatly, nonverbal tends to be mostly used for severe or profound inteleltcially disabled kids. Being "voice off" /nonverbal is different in the Deaf community. But then again, voice off folks (ie little or no verbal skills are kinda rare)
 
Wirelessly posted

Deaf and communicate in American Sign Language would be a better choice. I like to know what language people use rather it is Spanish, French, OR American Sign Language.

I don't think they cared because it bothers them if they don't hear people talk.
 
I went to this school............ "Successful program" Yeah right.

From reading this article - several workers are still there, wow.
 
Well then why don't you pass on the info about Rocky Mountain Deaf School to the program? Or even Colarado School for the Deaf. Maybe the parents who have kids in that program are unaware of better options.......and heck, at least the kids here are in a formal program, and aren't solotaire mainstreaming.
 
Wirelessly posted

Deaf and communicate in American Sign Language would be a better choice. I like to know what language people use rather it is Spanish, French, OR American Sign Language.

I don't think they cared because it bothers them if they don't hear people talk.

I agree....Deaf and communicates in ASL is better.
 
Can you elaborate, if you dont mind?

Where do I start? Should I walk over there and give them an interview for you guys?

I am literally less than a mile from Monroe right now, a block from Conrad Ball Middle School - where the deaf program goes..

Everything is wrong at the program here. My mom wrote up a 80 page report outlining all issues regarding the school system here, and when I had my kid here, i checked it out, 10+ years later -- still the same

If you had a kid with CI, forget it... no fancy speech education here, all basic.

Primarily SEE here.

ALL the deaf kids are bound to the resource room at least 1/2 of the day, i hope that changed.

Many more.. THese are the reasons I went to the deaf school, thankfully.

Out of 10+ students in my group of deafies... this is not a brag at all.. but i was the only one that ended up going to the deaf school, and out of them all (yes i see them still) ... How do i say this nicely.. I'm just glad that I am capable of doing things that I am doing now - i dont think I would have been able to do that if i stayed in that program.
 
Where do I start? Should I walk over there and give them an interview for you guys?

I am literally less than a mile from Monroe right now, a block from Conrad Ball Middle School - where the deaf program goes..

Everything is wrong at the program here. My mom wrote up a 80 page report outlining all issues regarding the school system here, and when I had my kid here, i checked it out, 10+ years later -- still the same

If you had a kid with CI, forget it... no fancy speech education here, all basic.

Primarily SEE here.

ALL the deaf kids are bound to the resource room at least 1/2 of the day, i hope that changed.

Many more.. THese are the reasons I went to the deaf school, thankfully.

Out of 10+ students in my group of deafies... this is not a brag at all.. but i was the only one that ended up going to the deaf school, and out of them all (yes i see them still) ... How do i say this nicely.. I'm just glad that I am capable of doing things that I am doing now - i dont think I would have been able to do that if i stayed in that program.

So it was more of a self contained classroom in a public school than a deaf program? At least that is the impression I am getting. Those programs are rarely successful where the students are concerned...especially as they get older.
 
So it was more of a self contained classroom in a public school than a deaf program? At least that is the impression I am getting. Those programs are rarely successful where the students are concerned...especially as they get older.

Agreed. I had that from 4th to 6th grade. Most of the students ended up in deaf school.
 
Wirelessly posted

I had a choice to choose between class for the deaf (self contained) or continue public school with LD English/grammar class. I picked deaf class but mom didn't. Anyway I guess they would have sign SEE (or PSE/CASE) in that class.
 
Agreed. I had that from 4th to 6th grade. Most of the students ended up in deaf school.

4th to 6th grade is where the issues generally become noticeable. That is why I always remind parents whose children are younger and claim that their kid is "just fine" or has no social problems to "Wait. Their time is coming."
 
ALL the deaf kids are bound to the resource room at least 1/2 of the day, i hope that changed.

Many more.. THese are the reasons I went to the deaf school, thankfully.

Out of 10+ students in my group of deafies... this is not a brag at all.. but i was the only one that ended up going to the deaf school, and out of them all (yes i see them still) ... How do i say this nicely.. I'm just glad that I am capable of doing things that I am doing now - i dont think I would have been able to do that if i stayed in that program.
Oh was it a dhh resource room, or a general sped resource room? I do think a self contained classroom could work for early childhood or a program where kids need intense remediation and lots of exposure to ASL. But for academics, I think a better idea would be a magnet program..you know a school where dhh kids attend from all over, and even the hearing/mainstream teachers have experiance in teaching dhh kids? And yeah, mainstream sped tends to suck unfortunatly.
 
Where do I start? Should I walk over there and give them an interview for you guys?

I am literally less than a mile from Monroe right now, a block from Conrad Ball Middle School - where the deaf program goes..

Everything is wrong at the program here. My mom wrote up a 80 page report outlining all issues regarding the school system here, and when I had my kid here, i checked it out, 10+ years later -- still the same

If you had a kid with CI, forget it... no fancy speech education here, all basic.

Primarily SEE here.

ALL the deaf kids are bound to the resource room at least 1/2 of the day, i hope that changed.

Many more.. THese are the reasons I went to the deaf school, thankfully.

Out of 10+ students in my group of deafies... this is not a brag at all.. but i was the only one that ended up going to the deaf school, and out of them all (yes i see them still) ... How do i say this nicely.. I'm just glad that I am capable of doing things that I am doing now - i dont think I would have been able to do that if i stayed in that program.

By reading between the lines, I TOTALLY undersstand what you are saying.
 
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