Title: Deaf Students with Additional Needs
1Deaf Students with Additional Needs
- Karen M. Ewing, Ph.D.
- Gallaudet University
2Introduction
- B.S.E. in Elementary Education and Special
Education - M.A. and Ph.D. in Deaf Education Multiple
Disabilities - Taught in a residential school for the deaf,
private schools, public schools, and university
setting - Worked with children from preschool-high school
age range - Son diagnosed with autism at the age of 2, have
the dual perspective of parent and educator
3Challenges in Multiple Disabilities
- Multiplicity
- Heterogeneity
- Low Incidence
- Diagnostic Delays
- History of Failure
4Multiplicity
- Deaf students with multiple disabilities have the
educational needs of deaf students plus the
educational needs associated with one or more
additional disabilities. The interaction of the
disabilities creates educational needs that are
not characteristic of any single disability.
5Heterogeneity
- Most schools in the US today serve students with
a wide range of ethnic backgrounds, learning
styles, family support systems, and educational
histories. Effective curricula for students with
multiple disabilities must be individualized and
unique.
6Low Incidence
- Compared with single disabilities, the incidence
of multiple disabilities is low. The number of
deaf students with additional disabilities is
extremely small. Consequently, few curriculum
guides, professional materials and training
opportunities are available to teachers working
with this population.
7Diagnostic Delays
- The diagnosis of second and third disabilities is
often more difficult than diagnosing a single
disability, and parents and professionals often
delay recognizing or accepting diagnoses of
additional disabilities, which can result in
developmental delays that curriculum planning
should address.
8History of Failure
- Many students with multiple disabilities
experience failure for a significant period of
time. As part of the curriculum development
process, educators should consider the effects of
the failure experiences on skills, behavior, and
self-esteem.
9Assumptions
- Every child can learn.
- Students with multiple disabilities are unique.
- Educational outcomes should be functional.
- Intervention should be compensatory, rather than
remedial. - Peer acceptance and social relations are
essential for all students. - Families are critical for success.
10Every child can learn
- While this assumption may seem self-evident,
educators may not believe it when facing a
student whose disabilities are multiple and
severe. Intervention and curriculum design
should begin with the student rather than with
the predetermined content. Consideration for
nonacademic areas and task-analysis are helpful.
11Students are unique
- Curriculum designed for students with multiple
disabilities should be individualized, with
content, objectives, scope, and sequence tailored
to each student.
12Educational outcomes should be functional
- Goals for students with multiple disabilities,
like those for all students, should enable them
to function as productively and independently as
possible in the mainstream of society.
Curriculum should be future-oriented, practical,
and meaningful.
13Intervention should be compensatory, rather than
remedial
- Remedial curricula focus on correcting a childs
disabilityauditory training and physical therapy
are familiar examples. Compensatory curricula
emphasize utilizing the childs strengths to
acquire skills that the disability would seem to
preventa child who does not have functional
language, for example might be able to learn to
use a picture menu to order at a restaurant.
14Peer acceptance and social relations are
essential for all students
- The skills that most learners with multiple
disabilities need mostlinguistic skills and
social skillsare best learned from peers. Peer
tutors, mentors, and models provide very powerful
learning opportunities for children with multiple
disabilities. Social skills are an essential
component of curriculum development.
15Families are critical for success
- Curriculum designed for students with multiple
disabilities is incomplete without the childs
family. Family input helps define valid
long-range goals, and the home environment
provides opportunities for functional curriculum
goals and objectives.
16Overview of Specific Disabilities
- Learning Disabilities
- Emotional Disorders
- Visual Impairment
- Mental Retardation
- ADD/ADHD
- Autism
17What Are the Numbers?
- The number of Deaf students with additional
disabilities is estimated to be between 42-55
(Gallaudet Research Institute, 2005) - Functional Assessments completed by deaf
educators estimated that 69 of all deaf students
were assessed to have functional limitations in
the classroom (Gallaudet Research Institute, 2003)
18Learning Disabilities
- Most prevalent disability found in Deaf children
(9.2, GRI, 2005) - Deaf children are identified with a learning
disability much later than hearing children,
which translates to lost time and services - Little research related to both deafness and
learning disabilities
19Teaching Strategies LD
- Teachers MODEL desired behaviors.
- They BREAK TERMINAL GOALS into component parts.
- They teach each objective in a VARIETY OF
CONTEXTS. - They teach each each objective with a VARIETY OF
MATERIALS.
20Teaching Strategies LD
- They provide VARYING amounts of practice.
- They ORGANIZE MATERIAL to facilitate recall.
- They ORGANIZE LEARNING to include rehearsal
strategies, over-learning and distributive
practice.
21Teaching Strategies LD
- They consistently use MOTIVATORS.
- They consistently use INTERESTING TASKS AND
MATERIALS. - (Jones, 1999)
22Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
- Reported in 6 of all deaf children, yet is the
most common neurodevelopmental disorder in
childhood (GRI, 2005). - Core symptoms are developmentally inappropriate
levels of inattention, hyperactivity, and
impulsivity. - Difficulties are found in one or more major life
areas home, school, work, or social
relationships
23Comprehensive Treatment of ADHD
- Multi-modal treatment approach consists of four
core interventions - Patient, parent, and teacher education about the
disorder - Medication
- Behavior Therapy
- Environmental supports community, school
programming
24Teaching Strategies ADHD
- Provide more direct instruction and one-to-one
instruction when possible - Use guided instruction
- Teach and practice organization skills and study
skills for each subject area - Design lessons so that students have to actively
respond
25Teaching Strategies ADHD
- Design highly motivating and enriching curriculum
with ample opportunity for hands-on activities
and movement. - Eliminate repetition from task or use more novel
ways to practice. - Use computers in instruction.
- Challenge but dont overwhelm.
26Teaching Strategies ADHD
- Design tasks of low to moderate frustration
levels. - Change evaluation methods to suit the childs
learning styles and strengths. - (Hallowell Ratey, 2005)
27Visual Impairments
- Deaf students who are legally blind make up 1.3
of the population - Estimates place another 11 of deaf children as
having moderate to severe vision loss that
impacts their learning (Gallaudet Research
Institute, 2003) - 6 of children who are deafblind are totally deaf
and totally blind
28Teaching Strategies Visual Impairments
- Make use of the residual hearing and the residual
vision, but do not regard hearing or vision as
all or nothing, know when students can and cannot
see and how it changes in different environments. - React to the learners actions and communication
attempts as they happen.
29Teaching Strategies Visual Impairments
- Give plenty of time for reactions and
decisionswith less access to context, it may
take longer to put the pieces together. - Plan experiences so that problem solving is
required. - Use functional activities that can be learned in
the natural routines of the day. - Collaborate with professionals in the vision
field.
30Autism
- Deaf Students diagnosed with autism have just
begun to be counted. The recent count states that
1 of deaf students have autism (GRI, 2005). - 1 out of 166 students in general population have
autistic spectrum disorders (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 2007).
31Areas affected by Autism
- Communication
- Social Interaction
- Sensory Impairment
- Play
- Behaviors
32Teaching Strategies Autism
- Provide a highly structured environment
- Provide visual supports for everything
- Incorporate social skills goals into everyday
lessons - Provide a quite place to allow self-calming to
occur - Evaluate environment to lesson sensory issues
33Ecological Assessment Steps
- List the sub-environments in which the student is
functioning. (e.g. classroom, hallway, bus,
after school club, etc.) - Inventory the activities that typically occur in
each sub-environment - For each inventoried activity, list the skills
typically needed to perform the activity - Prioritize all of the inventoried skills across
activities and sub-environments for the learner.
34Steps for Adapting the General Curriculum
- Materials for study
- Method of study
- Pace of instruction
- Learning focus
- Instructional setting
- Evaluation of learning
35Functional Academics
- What does that mean?
- How does that relate to my subject area?
- How will it benefits students with multiple
disabilities?
36Areas of Functional Academics
- Language Arts
- Science
- Social Studies
- Math
- Social and Behavior Skills
- Life Skills
37Social and Behavioral Skills
- Friendship
- Community Membership
- Turn taking
- Seeking and Gaining Attention
- Cooperation
- Conversation Skills
- Transitioning
38Social and Behavior Skills
- Children with disabilities must have access to
their non-disabled peers in order to develop
social skills. For deaf students with multiple
disabilities their non-disabled peers are Deaf
students in the general school population. - (Jones, Jones, Ewing, 2006)
39Social Skills Assessments
- Many helpful products that can be used to develop
individualized social skills goals for the IEP - Student involvement as well as parental
involvement can add great value to the process - Social skills are important life skills
40Life Skills
- A life skills curriculum fosters independence as
well as prepares students for life after the
classroom. - Vocational preparation
- Recreation and Leisure
- Community Living
- Health and Sex Education