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Educational Issues for Sensory Disabilities Created by Matt Maurer, Ph.D.
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The Sensory Disabilities Blind AKA Low vision Blind is a PC term Deaf AKA Hearing impaired AKA Hard of hearing Deaf is a PC term
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Organizing Concepts on Sensory Disabilities The deficit model is strongest here The disability is not tragic for most deaf or blind people, it is their “normal” These disabilities have real limitations, AND they are minimal (think difficulty, not impossibility)
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Blind Orienting Ideas The blind comprise organizational joiners and non-joiners The organized blind see themselves as an oppressed minority Braille is their “print” medium The blind tend to be technology “early adopters”
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The Most Important Thing I Have Learned Working with Blind Children Blind children do not want to be pitied Blind children want to be like sighted peers It is both easy and common to enable dependent behavior Many developmentally delayed children are mislabeled MMH Many blind children are very reflective Kids are kids (talents are lurking there, and we must find them)
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The Early Development of Blind Children The process for a parent of a blind child is often much like death Blind children are often asked to sit and wait “Now, don’t touch,” can further disable
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Literacy Issues for Blind Children Braille is critical (level I and II) Large print is over-used Technology will replace Braille when we abandon reading altogether Level I and II Braille Talking books (Daisy standard)
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Organizations Serving the Needs of Blind Children The National Federation of the Blind (NFB), parents divisions, and state affiliates American Council of the Blind (ACB) and state affiliates The American Printing House for the Blind (APH)
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So What Should a Teacher Do? Keep the mind active Remember they “see” with their hands (keep those hands “looking”) Continue to challenge our tendency to enable dependence Maintain appropriately high expectations
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Deaf Organizing Ideas A strong Deaf community exists There are community joiners and non- joiners American Sign Language is their first language (English is their second!) The deaf are also often technology early adopters
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What I have Picked up about Deaf Children They too want to be treated as equal to their hearing peers (in many ways) English language is often delayed (ESL), causing misdiagnosis Kids are kids – again, talents are abundant!
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Early Development of Deaf Children Deaf parents make a great difference (inclusion in Deaf culture) Parental acceptance parallels those of blind children, but maybe not as severe Some “sit and wait” parallels but again, maybe not as severe
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Literacy Issues “Speaking” one language and reading another Parental denial can lead to late learning of ASL Balance between ASL and English is often off
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Organizations Serving the Needs of Deaf Children National Organization of the Deaf (NAD) The American Society for Deaf Children Gallaudet University National Technical Institute for the Deaf
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So What Should a Teacher Do? Learn ASL (as best you can!!) Do not further enable Support English a strong balance between “spoken” and written language Focus on the child’s brilliance, not the deficit
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A Final Reminder The more they are different, the more kids are just kids. Treat them like kids, not like disabled kids!!
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