teacher inservice presented by diana bratlien fall 2002 and beyond…

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Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

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Page 1: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Teacher Inservice

Presented by Diana BratlienFall 2002 and beyond…

Page 2: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

About the Inservice Project title

So you have a Hard of Hearing Student in Your Class…Now What?

Intended Audience General education teachers who currently have hard of

hearing students in their classrooms. Goals and Objectives

Understand Social-Emotional Impact of Hearing Loss Understand Hearing Loss Levels Develop an Empathy towards those with a hearing loss Understand Academic implications

Page 3: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

AbstractThis presentation was designed to ease

general education teachers’ fears over working with students’ who have a hearing loss. In addition, it was designed to help teachers develop an empathy towards working with hard of hearing students.

As any inservice, this is a work in progress. It is meant to be presented repeatedly to schools each year as more teachers have mainstreamed students who are hard of hearing. The notes on the bottom of the slides are functional notes and meant to be guidelines for you as you present. Some notes may be altered depending on the age levels the general education teachers work with.

Currently, the notes are divided for two individuals since it has been presented by a partnership of Teachers for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.

Page 4: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

My Hearing Loss by a former student of Bemidji Area Schools

I feel, I wish, I could hear everyday.I feel that I could hear more,Including sounds I have never heard.I feel lonely,I wish I could have more friends.I wish I wouldn’t be picked on.I want to be treated like everyone else.You can’t change it,And you sit there waiting for a possibleMiracle, breakthrough.My life is full of sadness.

Page 5: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

So You have a Hard of Hearing Student in class…

Now…what?

Page 6: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Our Goals today… Understand Social-Emotional Impact of

Hearing Loss

Understand Hearing Loss Levels

Develop an Empathy towards those with a hearing loss

Understand Academic implications

Page 7: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Are You Lucky Enough to Need Glasses?

Lens Crafters ad 2002

Page 8: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Are You Lucky Enough to Wear Hearing Aids?

It just doesn’t have the same ring to it…

Page 9: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Social Stigmas Weight, attractiveness, etc.

Race

Gender

Vision Loss

Hearing Loss

Page 10: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

VISION PROBLEMS?

AIRPLANE

Page 11: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

HERE ARE SOME GLASSES…

AIRPLANE

Page 12: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

HEARING PROBLEMS?

Page 13: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Here is a Hearing aid…

Page 14: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Understanding Hearing Loss

Conductive Hearing Loss

vs.

Sensorineural Hearing Loss

Page 15: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Conductive Loss Hearing loss would

show a flat line

Hearing aid turns all sounds up the same degree (like a radio)

Page 16: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Sensorineural Loss Loss shown all over

audiogram (may be sloping, rising, or curved)

Hearing aid amplifies sounds we need and sounds we don’t need.

Page 17: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Sensorineural Loss Loss shown all over

audiogram (may be sloping, rising, or curved)

Hearing aid amplifies sounds we need and sounds we don’t need.

Page 18: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Sensorineural Loss Loss shown all over

audiogram (may be sloping, rising, or curved)

Hearing aid amplifies sounds we need and sounds we don’t need.

Page 19: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Sensorineural Loss Loss shown all over

audiogram (may be sloping, rising, or curved)

Hearing aid amplifies sounds we need and sounds we don’t need.

Page 20: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Special education Criteria

First and foremost…an audiologist

has tested the child and found a

hearing loss that verifies one of the

following…

Page 21: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Special education Criteria Continued

A 20 decibel or greater loss in both

ears

Or…..

A 45 decibel or greater loss in one ear.

Page 22: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Levels of Hearing Loss Mild Moderate Moderate to Severe Severe Profound

Page 23: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What is normal hearing defined as? Students can detect all speech

sounds (whispering, etc.)

On your sample handout… they would have a -10 decibel (dB) to +15 dB hearing range.

Page 24: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

How is a minimal hearing loss defined? Students may have difficulty hearing faint

or distant speech.

Peer conversation and teacher instructions presented too rapidly, particularly in noisy classrooms, are likely to result in missed information.

Loss is between 16 to 25 decibels.

Page 25: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What is mild hearing loss? mild = small…so it doesn’t affect them right?

Student may miss up to 50% of class discussions.

Students will require the use of a hearing aid or personal FM system.

Loss is between 26 to 40 decibels on your handout.

Page 26: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What is a moderate hearing loss like? Classroom conversation from 3 to 5 ft. away

can be understood if they know the context.

Hearing aids and/or personal FM systems are essential.

Specific attention directed at language development, reading and written language.

Loss is between 41 to 55 decibels.

Page 27: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What is a moderate-severe loss? Without amplification students can miss

up to 100% of speech information. Full time use of amplification is essential.

They will probably require additional help in all language based academic subjects.

Loss is between 56 to 70 decibels.

Page 28: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What is does it mean to have a severe hearing loss?

Students can only hear loud noises at close distances.

They require individual hearing aids, intensive auditory training and specialized instructional techniques in reading, language, and speech development.

Loss is between 71 to 90 decibels.

Page 29: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

So what’s a profound loss then? These students rely on their eyes and not

their ears!

Usually a candidate for signing systems and specialized instructional techniques in reading, speech, and language development

A loss of 91 decibels or more is described as profound. They are Deaf.

Page 30: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

How about some empathy?

Insight to some of the questions you’re dying to

ask.

Page 31: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

The Why’s

Page 32: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

The Why’s

Why isn’t speech/lipreading enough?

Page 33: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

What we really said… Zoo Fondue Six Nest Car

Page 34: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

The Why’s Why can’t I just talk louder?

It seems like talking louder would help…however, studies show that talking louder only increases vowel energy and not consonant energy.

Ironically, yelling increases audibility but not intelligibility.

Page 35: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

The Why’s Why do I have to wear a microphone

if I have them sitting in front?

Children who are hard of hearing internally distort sounds.

They need speech 10 times louder than the background noise.

Page 36: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Answers to your test1. Bath2. Pearl3. Sour4. Mouse5. Learn6. Wheat7. Vine8. Tape9. Hedge10. mood

Page 37: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Actual Spelling test of Hard of Hearing Student

Page 38: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Classroom Teacher Study Study says…half of teachers thought

hearing loss and academic problems were not linked.

Teachers accused students of daydreaming because they participated most of the time.

Study by Ross, Brackett, and Maxon 1991

Page 39: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Facts on the impact of hearing loss on Education

Students with a hearing loss are generally 2 grade levels behind in their reading comprehension.

Page 40: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Language delays based on levels of hearing loss 15-26 dB loss

27- 40 dB loss

41-55 dB loss

56-70 dB loss

1.2 year delay

2.0 year delay

2.9 year delay

3.5 + year delay

Page 41: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Unilateral losses

Almost 50% of children with at least a 30 dB hearing loss in one ear, have failed one or more grades…or are receiving support services.

Page 42: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Classroom noises In a typical

classroom…the noise levels can reduce the student’s ability to understand to 60% or as low as 27% without appropriate acoustics (ex. carpet, etc.)

Page 43: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Won’t a student tell the teacher if they’re not hearing everything?

The problem with “not hearing so good” is that you don’t hear what you don’t hear and you don’t know that you didn’t hear because you didn’t hear it!

So even if a teacher asks, “Are you hearing me?” They will almost always say “yes!”

Page 44: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Comments made by Local Teachers…

Page 45: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

“I don’t think she needs the speakers, she hears me fine.”

Page 46: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

“I have a loud voice…I don’t need the microphone.”

Page 47: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

“She just has selective hearing and hears when she wants to.”

Page 48: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

“He hears me all the time when I call his name and I don’t have a microphone on.”

Page 49: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Some points to ponder…

Page 50: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Would you take away a person’s wheelchair if you knew that they could crawl without it?

Page 51: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

With a hearing loss, the question should never be if the person can hear you.

The question should be if the person can understand what you are saying.

Page 52: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Would you take away amplification from a hard of hearing person if they could hear you talking but not understand all the words without it?

Page 53: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Ok…Ok…I get it…So what can I do?

Page 54: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Receive training (you’re here!!!)

Page 55: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Gain understanding and empathy (we’re trying)

Page 56: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Respect student and don’t question the severity of the loss and it’s social, emotional, and academic impact.

Page 57: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Follow LEGAL IEP modifications and adaptations.

Page 58: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

If you have questions please…ask us, the student or their family.

Page 59: Teacher Inservice Presented by Diana Bratlien Fall 2002 and beyond…

Bibliography Collins, S.H. (1989). Sound Hearing, or…Hearing What you Miss.

Eugene, OR: Garlic Press.

Flexer, Carol. (September 1995). Classroom Management of Children with Minimal Hearing Loss. The Hearing Journal, 48(9), 53-56.

Nussbaum, D. (1988). There’s a Hearing Impaired Child in My Class. Washington D.C.: Gallaudet University Press.

Bernard, Susan. (2002). Various handouts and quote collections.

Microsoft Office XP Clip Art Powerpoint Presentation