Title: Deafness
1Deafness Hearing Loss
- FRIEND CH 10,
- SPED 281
- Dr. Schneider
2LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Definition of Deafness Hearing Loss
- Historical stepping stones
- Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- Identification procedure for hearing loss
- Types of services for students who are hard of
hearing or deaf - Prevalence data
- Best Teaching strategies for students who are
hard of hearing or deaf - Perspectives of family members
- Issues affecting the field of Deaf Education
3Definition of Deafness Hearing Loss
- Terminology not very specific
- disability first deaf person
- person first person who is deaf
- person w/ hearing loss
- Deaf linguistic cultural minority
- The community of deaf individuals stresses that
they have their culture and that nothing needs to
be fixed about them - hearing loss is measured according to an
individual s ability to hear sounds that differ
in pitch loudness - this ability is being charted on an audiogram
4Definition of Deafness Hearing Loss Federal
Definition
- Hearing impairment permanent or fluctuating that
adversely affects educational performance but is
not included under deafness in this section - Deafness hearing impairment so severe that the
child is - impaired in processing linguistic information w/
or w/o amplification - Impaired hearing adversely affects educational
performance - SINCE FEDERAL DEFINITION IS INCOMPLETE
- Additional info on definitions from National
Center for Education Statistics (2002) with
expansions
5Definition of Deafness Hearing Loss from
National Center for Education Statistics (2002)
with expansions
- Hearing impairment impairment in hearing,
permanent or fluctuating, that adversely affects
educational performance, in most severe case b/c
child is impaired in processing linguistic
information via hearing. - Deafness hearing impairment so severe that it
hearing linguistic information is impaired with
or without amplification it adversely affects
educational performance - Hard of hearing hearing impairment that is
permanent of fluctuating it adversely affects
educational performance but is not included under
definition of deaf
6Historical stepping stones
- (1) oral/aural method only
- oral/aural method speaking words using speech
reading, amplification of sound - Problem children severely hard of hearing had to
learn to lip read BUT English is 75 impossible
to lip-read! - (2) sign language only
- (3) now both signed languages print pattern of
English - A) American Sign Language w/ finger spelling of
proper nouns, names - B) Simultaneous Communication
- using English word order finger spelling
ASL parts new parts oral speech /reading
manually coded English - gtcurrent position do not just learn/teach one
of these 3 communication strategies,
learn/teach/use ALL 3
7Historical stepping stones
- (1) oral/aural method only
- oral/aural method speaking words using speech
reading, amplification of sound - Problem children severely hard of hearing had to
learn to lip read BUT English is 75 impossible
to lip-read! - (2) sign language only
- (3) now both, even both sign languages
- A) American Sign Language w/ finger spelling of
proper nouns, names - B) Simultaneous Communication
- using English word order finger spelling
ASL parts new parts oral speech /reading
manually coded English - gtcurrent position do not just learn/teach one
of these 3 communication strategies,
learn/teach/use ALL 3
8Historical stepping stones
- For more than a century, residential schools and
a few day schools were the only ways to get
educated as a deaf person or one hard of hearing. - From 1975 on (P.L. 94-142, now IDEA), assured
that majority of deaf individuals and hard of
hearing attended general education classrooms.
9Causes of hearing loss
- A. Pre-lingual before individual has learned
language. - premature birth
- birth complications (e.g., lack of oxygen)
- heredity both being born deaf loosing hearing
gradually leading to deafness can be hereditary
congenital hearing loss - 10 have deaf/hard of hearing parent
- 30 have deaf/hard of hearing relative
- maternal rubella or diabetis
- Toxema during pregnancy (w/ dangerously high
blood pressure) - Malformation of ear structure
- congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV)
10Causes of hearing loss
- B. Post-lingual after individual has learned
lang. - appr. 5 of deaf population
- Hereditary acquired or adventitious hearing
loss - brain trauma
- Repeated exposure to loud noise
- Drugs that can cause hearing loss
- high fever (e.g., meningitis)
- ottis media (most common) middle ear infections
- progressive degenerative genetic disease (usually
does not affect school children) - NOTE
- measles mumps are not a cause anymore (2000)
11Causes of hearing loss Types
- Conductive hearing loss
- Caused by an OUTER EAR or MIDDLE EAR PROBLEM
thus sounds cannot get to inner ear listening
technology can help - Sensory-neural learning loss
- Caused by an INNER EAR PROBLEM or ALONG the
PATHWAY to the BRAIN STEM (-gt cochlear
implants) - Mixed hearing loss
- When the hearing loss involves both a
sensory-neural and the conductive hearing loss - Bilateral or uni-lateral hearing loss
- Does it affect one ear only (UNI) or both (BI)?
- Fluctuating hearing loss
- Does it affect sometimes one ear and then the
other - Does it occur some days but not on others? (e.g.,
tinnitus)
12Prevalence of hearing loss
- 16 out of every 1000 school children in the use
has a significant hearing loss - 8.6 of US population hearing loss (NIH, 2002)
- 1.3 children ? low incident disability
- 1.1 of all school children receive IDEA-based
services - 22 of those who are deaf also have 1 other
disability - 8 of those who are deaf also have 2 or more
disabilities - 90 of children who are hard of hearing or are
deaf have hearing parents - Insignificant differences between males/females
and between ethnic groups
13Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- The audiogram results identify the degree of
hearing loss. - no hearing loss (0-15 dB)
- slight hearing loss (16-25 dB)
- mild hearing loss (26-40 dB)
- moderate hearing loss (41-55 dB)
- moderate-severe hearing loss (56-70 dB)
- severe hearing loss (71-90dB)
- profound hearing loss (91 dB)
14Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- Degrees of hearing loss
- no hearing loss (0-15 dB)
- No impact on communication
- slight hearing loss (16-25 dB)
- speech difficult to understand
- in noisy environment -gt could be classroom!
- mild hearing loss (26-40 dB)
- faint, distant speech difficult to understand,
even in quiet environment - classroom discussions definitely difficult to
follow
15Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- Degrees of hearing loss
- moderate hearing loss (41-55 dB)
- conversational speech understandable only when
close by - group activities in class hard to follow
- moderate-severe hearing loss (56-70 dB)
- only loud, clear conversational speech yes
- group situations very difficult
- speech intelligible but noticeably impaired
16Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- Degrees of hearing loss
- severe hearing loss (71-90dB)
- conversational speech understandable only if
loud, even then keywords may be difficult to hear - environ. Sounds understandable but not always
identified - speech not always intelligible
- profound hearing loss (91 dB)
- Cannot understand conversational speech
- Can understand some loud environ. sounds
- speech difficult to understand or may not be
developed at all
17Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (1) COMMUNICATION CHARACTERISTICS
- If reduced in early childhood gt emotional bonds
not strong social-cultural elements of language
not passed on - (2) LEARNING CHARACTERISTICS
- quantity and quality of direct vicarious
experiences in nature/outside reduced - gt need for carefully constructed safe
experiences - Hard of hearing leads to different schemata about
environment, life, language, logical sequences - gt Reduced of social connections learning
opportunities (see p. 377)
18Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (3) COGNITIVE CHARACTERISTICS
- those with disability as intelligent as those
without those disabilities however, deficits in
language perception and production may make them
look cognitively defect - appropriate teaching learning opportunities are
key - gt Proper non-verbal vs. verbal assessment is
needed
19Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (4) ACADEMIC CHARACTERISTICS
- a) receptive and productive vocabulary limited
- b) pronunciation, articulation difficulties
- c) need for sign language as communication tool
- d) reliance on assistive listening devices
(e.g., cochlear implants) other technology, - e) reading A PROBLEM B/C ENGLISH PRINT is a
second language their first language, oral
language is signing that leaves them with a
different picture about language structure than
print requires research documents success for
those who have family support
20Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (4) ACADEMIC CHARACTERISTICS
- f) writing A PROBLEM B/C it requires
understanding English sentence structure, its
vocabulary this is a second language task
research has not many examples of success stories
for writing BUT this may also be due to the
teaching strategies used in the studies - g) MATH higher performance levels than in
reading and writing BUT any task that involves
reading comprehension can lead to problems due to
problems with second language ENGLISH IN PRINT
21Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (5) SOCIAL EMOTIONAL
- often secluded socially because of lack of
social-emotional understanding between the
hearing and the hearing impaired
(miscommunication) - gt behavior issues
- gt low self-esteem (higher among hard-of-hearing
alone) - in early development barriers between hearing
parents and siblings child hard of hearing - In school barriers between hearing teachers/peers
child hard of hearing gt behavior issues - miss out on oral social clues, idiomatic
expressions, what is said between the lines
through tone of voice
22Characteristics of deafness hearing loss
- (6) BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS
- If you cannot hear peoples reasoning for
behavior and you have limited dialogue partners,
you lag behind understanding behavior of those
around you and the choices the make gt
insecurity, anger, frustration, fear,
disappointment gt behavior that does not fit in
social setting gt USE PATHS project (p. 382)
23Identification procedure for hearing loss
- AUDIOLOGICAL EVALUATION
- Case history (family history, interview, medical
data ottis media middle ear infection) - Physical evaluation (outer ear, inner ear ear
canal, eardrum, middle ear function - Audiometric analysis with audiogram to measure
pure tone - OTHER ASSESSMENTS (to rule out co-occurring
disabilities) - Vision
- Overall health
- Achievement tests (literacy, math skills)
- Intelligence test
24Identification procedure for hearing loss
- ELIGIBILITY CHRITERIA (OFTEN CONSIDERED)
- Inability to recognize most spoken words
occurring at conversational level in a quiet room
without the use of assistive devices - Significant receptive and/or productive language
delay - Impairment of speech articulation, voice or
fluency - Significant discrepancy between verbal and
nonverbal performance on an intelligence test - Significant delay in reading skills because of
language deficits or overall lower than expected
academic performance - Inattention or serious behavior issues due to
hearing loss
25Identification procedure for hearing loss
- infant screening 2x during first 6 months
- after that audiologist conducts
- behavioral audiological evaluation
- conclusions drawn based on
- childs behavioral response
- audiometer generates pure tones
- test hearing range
- select, fit hearing aids
- evaluate other listening devices
26Identification procedure for hearing loss
- responses up to age 3
- more frequent sucking
- more frequent eye blinking
- head turning
- stop of play to listen to sound
- responses older children
- raise finger for as long as they
- hear sound, then lower it
27Types of services for students who are hard of
hearing or deaf
- 15 in special schools for the hard of
hearing-deaf gt significant hearing loss - 25 in public schools but for more than 60 in
special classes (resource) - 20 in general ed classes for 20 of time at
least - 40 in general ed classes for more than 80 of
time INCLUDSION
28Best Teaching strategies
- A. Technological Devices
- hearing aids only amplify sound gt most
beneficial in quiet environment - cochlear implants electronic device that
compensates for absent hair cells in the cochlea
gtIt directly stimulates the nerve fibers - Assistive Learning devices
- an FM radio system that is tuned in for sound
frequencies only audible for the person who wears
microphone gt must be passed on during group work
from student to student
29Best Teaching strategies
- For students hard of hearing inclusion best
- in inclusion setting
- encourage peers to learn sign language (
yourself) - check that all notes taken by student and/or note
taker are complete - group student with peers who are understanding
caring - foster conversation using
- augmenting instruction
- total communication
- cued speech
- oral/aural strategies
- For students who are deaf inclusion not
necessarily best educational choice
30Best Teaching strategies
- In general up the ladder of experiential
learning from concrete to abstract Emphasize
visual cues and teaching strategies - Sign finger spelling
- Speech reading watching mouth face movement of
speaker - Technology TV, overheads, elmos, pointers, video
relay services, telecommunication relay service, - Materials pictures, illustrations, slides,
charts, film clips w/ captions, graphics,
artifacts - Culture sensitive signs for daily routines
31Best Teaching strategies
- Emphasize value of reading!
- Enhances vocabulary students cannot not hear well
or at all - Enhances understanding of grammatical logic and
glue systems of the language that is hard to
hear or inaudible - Enhances background knowledge about the hearing
world if certain experiences are re-modeled for
them
32Best Teaching strategies
- How are sign language and American Sign Language
different from one another? - How does Central Auditory Processing Disorder
differ from being hard of hearing?
33Perspectives of family members
- For hearing parents, it is difficult to
understand the world of the hearing impaired - Often diagnosis occurs late because it is a low
incidence disability - Requires commitment of entire family to assure
social-emotional integration of hearing impaired
individual - Important for success are a) perseverance, b)
emphasis on reading, c) early identification, d)
family support, e) involvement in extracurricular
activities - Motto do not let deafness hold you back
34Issues affecting the field of Deaf Education
- Universal new-born hearing screening
- Now possible to identify hearing loss by 6 months
of age, before not until age 2 (EHDI) - Increase use of cochlear implants
- The device stimulates the hearing nerve in the
inner ear so that messages can be transferred to
the brain requires wearing a small piece behind
your ear - Designed for those with severe to profound
hearing loss - Bilingual-bicultural approach for educating
individuals hard of hearing or deaf - Teaching ASL as the primary language and English
is the second language English is then taught by
learning how to read and write in the same print
system as the non-hearing impaired peers
35websites
- www.deafchildren.org/home/home.html
- http//p3.csun.edu
- http//center.uncg.edu (infant- toddler info)
- www.babyhearing.org (early identification)
- www.deaflinx.com (factual info to foster
deaf-friendly world) - www.deafed.net (info about preparation of new
teachers) - http//clerccenter.gallaudet.edu (National Deaf
Education Center w/ materials strategies for
teachers) - www.agbell.org (international organization
addressing hearing loss deaf issues - www.NCLID.unco.edu (National Center on Low
Incidence Disabilities)