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    Early Years Technology Builds Child Literacy Skills

    Friday, May 10th, 2013

    Early-years technology “awakens the imagination and fosters the cognitive development of young children”, while developing early literacy skills in children who may not have a language-rich home environment, according to Remake Learning, the blog of the Pittsburgh Kids+Creativity Network.
    Read: How Early Years Innovators Are Changing The Tech Game
    Best of all, parents and caregivers can prompt [...]

    Florida Legislates For The Auditory-Verbal Option

    Tuesday, May 7th, 2013

    Parents of newly-identified children who’re profoundly deaf, have a lot going on. Not least, they must make communication choices on behalf of the children, and decide how the family is going to communicate in general.
    Recently, the US state of Florida passed legislation for parents to be told of all the possible communication options for deaf children. [...]

    NDCS Queries UK Councils On Education Supports

    Wednesday, April 24th, 2013

    Fresh concerns over cuts to education supports for deaf/hoh pupils in the UK have emerged, after one-third of councils cut supports in 2011. NDCS is also reporting that almost one-half of London’s local councils did not respond to a Freedom of Information request to disclose spending plans by April 2, 2013.
    Read: Charity’s fears over cuts [...]

    Talking With Teens Who Have Hearing Issues

    Monday, April 22nd, 2013

    Deafness is called the ‘invisible disability’, and teens can be very reluctant to disclose what they see as a social vulnerability. A librarian who has hearing issues herself, shares some communication tips – which can be used almost anywhere a pen, paper, the internet or a mobile phone is available.
    Read: Serving teens with hearing issues [...]

    “I Am The Happiest Deaf Teenager On Facebook”

    Thursday, April 11th, 2013

    His profile reads “I am the happiest deaf teenager on Facebook”. UK-based Jamie Williams started writing a blog after a friend said how happy and content he is, even when he’s deaf. And his writing ability shows in the blog.
    Read >> Deaf teenager’s blog takes Facebook by storm
    Jamie’s blog is “A Deaf Boy in A [...]

    Lip-Reading Challenges In The Hearing World

    Friday, April 5th, 2013

    Having to verbally ”translate” for signing deaf friends who do not lip-read, confirmed this skill to Rachel Kolb, a masters student at Stanford University in California. She writes eloquently here, about the challenges of lip-reading.
    Read>> Seeing At The Speed Of Sound
    Lip-reading is a very under-rated skill. When hearing-devices are off, it can be the ideal back-up [...]

    Parents’ Essential Role In Language Development

    Saturday, March 30th, 2013

    Parents have a stronger role than researchers thought, in developing verbal language in children with hearing issues. A new study from the University of Miami shows “maternal sensitivity [has] strong and consistent effects on oral language learning”, a fact that hospital cochlear implant teams need to note.
    Mom’s sensitivity helps language learning in deaf children
    Dr Dana [...]

    “He Is Not Me”: A Book On Mainstream Education

    Monday, March 25th, 2013

    A new book, “He Is Not Me”, by Stuart McNaughton, tells the story of being deaf from birth – and opting for a cochlear implant in his twenties. Notably, Stuart’s parents mainstream-educated him, to equip him with real-world skills from the very start – with the support of teachers and professionals.
    Read >> He Is Not [...]

    Crowd-Computing: New Solutions For Captions

    Tuesday, March 19th, 2013

    Speech-to-text automation has a huge role in creating classroom captions for students with hearing and other issues, who don’t always note-take in class. To address the multi-speaker shortcomings of automated caption solutions, a program, Scribe, was devised at the University of Rochester.
    Scribe Tweaks Speech-To-Text Automation – With Humans
    Scribe works by crowd-sourcing humans to caption speech [...]

    Bilateral Cochlear Implants: Hearing With Two Ears

    Thursday, March 14th, 2013

    With bilateral cochlear implants (both ears) in Ireland’s news recently, here’s some information that may answer readers’ and families’ questions.
    Read: Who is a cochlear implant candidate?
    Some unilateral (single-ear) implant-wearers keep a hearing-aid in the other ear, and can recognise speech by listening through two ears. Others choose to ‘go bilateral’ with 2 cochlear implants, to [...]

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