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What is Deaf

Teacher Reflections on Transitioning From K-12 to Higher Education Classrooms
This term is used to refer to individuals with hearing loss of any level.
Published in Chapter:
EmBRACE the Transition: Reflections From Three Deaf Education Faculty
Jennifer Renée Kilpatrick (University of North Florida, USA), Stephanie J. Gardiner-Walsh (Illinois State University, USA), and Jessica A. Scott (Georgia State University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-3460-4.ch008
Abstract
In this chapter, readers will meet three junior faculty in the niche field of deaf education who teach in different programs in different states. As doctoral students, they met at a field-specific conference about a decade before they wrote this chapter. Throughout the last 10 years, they have developed relationships as colleagues, friends, and now, co-authors. They share their experiences, both as individuals and as a collective, through the use of narrative storytelling and collaborative reflection. The authors reflect on and synthesize their stories with a focus on (1) the impacts of the K-12 experience on their transitions into higher education, (2) the role of the conference/organization during these transitions, and (3) the barriers and supports they encountered throughout the transitions. The chapter concludes with their advice to readers on how to emBRACE the transition from K-12 to higher education, using BRACE as an acronym for five proactive steps individuals can take to ensure a successful transition.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
More Results
Rapid Game Development Using LiveCode in SEN and DHH Education
This refers to people with a hearing loss so severe that there is very little to no functional hearing.
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Improving Listening and Spoken Language Through Family Coaching and Distance Intervention/Telepractice
Small “d” deaf is generally used to describe individuals with a severe to profound hearing loss who cannot process sound, particularly speech, without hearing technology. They may or may not consider themselves part of the deaf community.
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Role of Learning Technology Strategies Among People With Disabilities: A Job Opportunities Barrier
Characterised as the lack of functional hearing and is dependent on visual or auditory communication. Visual contact involves sign languages, reading the lips, interpreting speech as well as reading and writing. Whereas hearing aids and tools provide visual means of communication.
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Integration of Information and Communication Technologies in Education for the Deaf
It is a person with difficulty or inability to use the sense of hearing due to a loss of partial hearing capacity or total, and unilateral or bilateral.
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Improving Listening and Spoken Language Through Family Coaching and Distance Intervention/Telepractice
Individuals who describe themselves as Capital “D” Deaf, identify with Deaf culture and the Deaf community and use sign language as their primary means of communication.
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Development of Communication Skills through Auditory Training Software in Special Education
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Maximizing the Impact of Language and Early Intervention on Literacy Among Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students: A Critical Assessment and Recommendation
The term Deaf does not refer to a medical diagnosis. The term Deaf refers to the individuals in the Deaf community ( National Association of the Deaf - NAD , n.d.). The Deaf community is a rich group and culture of individuals utilizing a shared language, American Sign Language. The individuals in the Deaf community may have a hearing difference but do not have to have a hearing difference to be a part of the community (Padden & Humphries, 1990).
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