Educational
Approaches\ Skills In Special Education
Contents
1.Oral and Aural Method
2.Trends in Special education
3.Auditory Approach
4.Auditory Training
Educational Approaches
Before
we put into action any kind of educational approach we first must assess the
severity of the hearing loss. After, we can pick a method for each individual child.
There are three primary communication methods used in education of deaf
children. These are:
Oral communication refers to the speaking and
listening skills needed to participate verbally in discussions, exchange
thoughts and information, make clear and convincing presentations, and interact
with a variety of audiences.
In the workplace, oral communication skills are used
to greet customers, discuss products and prices with suppliers, and explain
work procedures to co-workers. Other examples of tasks include taking messages,
speaking with clients on the phone, delivering and receiving verbal
instructions, participating in meetings, delivering presentations, negotiating
agreements and resolving conflicts.
NEW PROPOSED
DEFINITION
Oral communication is the knowledge and skills needed
effectively exchange thoughts and information with others by speaking,
listening and using non-verbal cues such as body language.
At work, people need oral communication skills to
greet customers, discuss products and prices with suppliers, and explain work
procedures to co-workers. Other examples of oral communication tasks include
speaking with clients on the phone, delivering and receiving verbal
instructions, participating in meetings, delivering presentations, negotiating
agreements and resolving conflicts.
Aural
Communication
Aural communication involves the
transmission of information through the auditory sensory system—the system of
speaking and hearing. It usually encompasses both verbal communication and
paralinguistic communication to convey meaning. Aural communication can be used
to transmit information independently or in combination with visual
communication. When conducting surveys, the mode of data collection determines
whether information can be transmitted aurally, visually, or both. Whether
survey information is transmitted aurally or visually influences how
respondents first perceive and then cognitively process information to provide
their responses. Aural communication relies heavily on verbal language when
information is transmitted through spoken words. Additionally, paralinguistic
or paraverbal communication, in which information is conveyed through the
speaker's
a) Oral/aural - an approach to deaf education that emphasizes auditory training, articulation ability and lip-reading.
b) Total communication - a method of interacting
with individuals with language impairments using a combination of spoken
language and signs, which includes sign language, voice, finger-spelling,
lip-reading, amplification, writing, gesture and visual imagery (pictures).
c) Bilingual/bicultural
(bi-bi) - This is a philosophy of teaching that
recognizes the authenticity and importance of both hearing and Deaf cultures,
and that incorporates elements of both in the classroom. Programs are
modeled on English as a Second Language (ESL) programs.
These methods have undergone waves of popularity and some are much older than others.
This doesn't mean, though, that one is better than the other. Each
individual is different, therefore each individual needs a different type of
method to help them with their development of language, communication and to
aid them in their learning. In these methods there may be
techniques that are used to aid the child with a particular method, such as:
a) American
Sign Language - a complete language, related historically to the
French. This is the manual language used by the Deaf community in the
United States.
b) Cued
Speech - a manual used by some deaf children and their
teachers/parents, that uses hand shapes near the mouth to help make lip-reading
easier.
c) Lip-reading
(Speech-reading) - Decoding the language of a speaker by paying
close attention to the face and mouth, without being able to hear the speaker's
voice.
As well as these different methods and different techniques, there are
different places and settings that the Deaf, or a child with a hearing
impairment can learn, such as:
a) Mainstreaming
- the practice of incorporating children with disabilities into
the regular classroom instead of keeping them apart in special classes.
b) Residential
schools - these are schools designed for Deaf individuals,
particular, to live and learn in a school where Deaf people and the Deaf
culture surrounds them everyday.
Oral/Aural
- In the United States, the oral/aural approach is
historically the oldest.
- Oralist approach of deaf education have believed that
deaf children are best served by instruction in lip-reading, in maximum
use of residual hearing (through amplification and auditory training), and
in articulation to improve speech.
Auditory-Oral Approach
- This approach combines speech, use of residual hearing
and speech-reading.
- This approach is the more traditional of the auditory
verbal/oral approaches.
- The child will be trained to use his or her hearing and
develop expressive speech.
- Pure oralism strongly emphasizes no signing and speech
is the only acceptable means of response.
- The goal of this approach is to have the child
mainstreamed into the child's regular school after having completed an
oral deaf or hard of hearing special education program.
- In order for success five elements must be present:
1) Parent involvement
2) Appropriate amplification
3) Consistent quality speech training
4) Developing appropriate language instruction
5) Range of placement option
Auditory-Verbal Approach
- Although the auditory-oral emphasize
speech-reading, this method does not.
- The child is taught to listen first and is not required
to look at the speaker's mouth for information.
- Often, the child is mainstreamed from the start in a
typical preschool rather than a special self-contained oral program.
- The goal of auditory-verbal practice is for children
who are deaf or hard of hearing to grow up in "typical" learning
and living environment that enables them to become independent,
participating, and contributing citizens in an complete mainstream
society. This is because all children with a hearing loss deserve an
opportunity to develop the ability to listen and use verbal communication
with their families and communities.
- This method emphasizes the increase likelihood that
young children, deaf or hard of hearing, can be educated to use even
minimal amounts of residual or remaining hearing. The use of
amplified residual hearing permits these children to learn to listen, process
verbal language, and to speak.
- With this method, disadvantages that are connected with
dependence on speech-reading are eliminated.
Auditory training
- Auditory training is teaching a person with a hearing
impairment how to use the residual or remaining hearing that is available
to them with the goal of maximizing use of speech and non-speech
cues.
- In developing an approach to auditory training, it is
important that the clinician consider the amount of hearing that the
client has.
- Clients with aided hearing levels in the mild to
moderately severe hearing range would work on sound discrimination
skills.
- Clients with aided hearing levels within the severe to
profound hearing loss range would improve the detection of sounds,
particularly environmental sounds. Therefore, the person may develop
at least a functional use of their hearing.
- The emphasis is on teaching the auditory skills that
may be delayed or missing altogether.
Lip reading (Speech-reading) - Cued
Speech
- This is a method, in which the deaf are able to read
the speech of others from the movements of the lips and mouth.
- It is also referred to as speech-reading, which
includes the reading of facial expressions and body language.
- Speech-reading is not normally used by itself. It is a
coping skill we use to communicate effectively with either wearing hearing
aids or using assistive listening devices and practicing effective coping
strategies.
- Cued speech is also known as cued English or cued
language.
- Cued Speech is a sound-based hand supplement to
speech-reading.
- In cued speech, eight hand shapes representing groups
of consonants are placed in four positions around the face that indicated
groups of vowel sounds. The shapes and locations in combination
with the mouth movements eliminate the ambiguity that speech-reading
produces.
- Combined with the natural lip movements of speech, the
cues make spoken language visible.
- Cued Speech in the spoken language, while American Sign
Language is the signed language.
- Cued Speech shows pronunciation, accent, duration, and
the rhythm of speech.
- Unless they learn American Sign Language as a second
language, students who grow up using Cued Speech are not able to
communicate with the larger community of Deaf adults who use sign
language.
Benefits
- It can be learned in a relatively short period of time,
which is helpful for parents and family, as well as the child.
- Cued speech is a way to provide full access to spoken
communication through the visual code.
- It provides an appropriate foundation for reading and
writing English. It positively affects literacy because it enables a
deaf child to internalize the language. The step of internalizing a
language is critical to the process of learning how to read and
write.
- Cued speech prevents parents from over-simplifying
their English or "dumb down" because they are
communicating in a language they are familiar with and do not have
to make themselves more easily understood.
- Children that use Cued Speech speech-read more
accurately.
- Cued speech gives a child an improvement in auditory
discrimination.
- Hearing families who use Cued Speech have better
communication and fewer behavioral problems.
The key to an aural/oral approach is practice. The child must be immersed
in a speech-intensive environment at home and school.
Total
Communication Method
- Total communication is the title of a philosophy of
communication and not a method.
- A number of sign systems, such as cued speech, were
developed to convey manual representations of English sentence structure
along with spoken language. The sign systems translate words and
grammatical morphemes used in spoken English into visible hand
configurations and gestures.
- All of the systems basically follow the share the same
features:
1) they generally familiarize themselves with some American Sign Language signs
for vocabulary,
2) to convey grammatical concepts, that are not expressed by separate signs in
American Sign Language they invent new signs, such as an article,
3) they also produce sentences that copy the syntactic structure of
English.
- Total communication is often the first approach
recommended because it encourages a child to use to use every available
mode of communication to both receive and convey messages. The mode of
communication depends on the particular need of the child, whether it is
manual, oral, auditory, and written.
- Today simultaneous communication is the most common
form of communication used in educational settings for deaf
children.
Benefits
- The main benefit is that it opens all roads and modes
of communication for the deaf child.
- It allows flexibility without eliminating any
options.
- It allows the child to choose the form that is best for
them in a given situation.
- It also allows the child some form of expressive
communication.
Bilingual/bicultural
(bi-bi) Method
"A person who is bicultural can
move freely within and between two different cultures. Biculturalism implies an
understanding of the mores, customs, practices, and expectations of members of
a cultural group and the ability to adapt to their expectations"
(Finnegan)
- Individuals, who are Deaf, are considered bilingual if
they are able to communicate effectively in both American Sign Language
and English.
- They are considered bicultural if they
are capable of functioning in both the Deaf community and the majority
culture.
"Research has shown that
effective language has to be fast and clear. ASL is an efficient language for
visual learning and is easier for Deaf children to acquire as a first language
than any form of English" (Finnegan)
- Bi-bi programs are modeled after English as a Second
Language (ESL) and foreign language interest programs. These
programs emphasize the positive aspects of the Deaf culture.
- Bilingual-bicultural (bi-bi) programs have admiration
for both American Sign Language and English.
- In bi-bi education American Sign Language is used as
the primarily language of instruction in order to introduce it as the
child's first language.
- Deaf culture is an important aspect to
the curriculum.
- English language skills are taught after proficiency in
American Sign Language is reached.
- This approach is for all children, no matter what there
hearing loss is, but these programs are usually not to be found in
mainstreaming, but in residential and day schools.
Benefits
- Early contact to comprehensible language, such as
American Sign Language, helps early cognitive development. This
promotes increased literacy and greater academic achievement.
- Students who attend bilingual-bicultural programs
develop functional skills in two languages.
- The emphasis of early language acquisition and
establishing American Sign Language, as their first language, provides a
base, in which English is later taught.
- Students in bi-bi programs have an increased
self-esteem and confidence because of the healthy view of Deaf children
and their acceptance of who they are, as well as the increased confidence
to function in bi-bi environments.
A statistic:
A little over 40% of students in American residential and day-schools, which
are designed for deaf and hearing-impaired children were using a form of a
bi-bi programming, while a larger portion of the remainder were using manually
coded English/total-communication.
American
Sign Language
- Sign language for the deaf was first organized in
France during the 18th century by Abbot Charles-Michel l'Epée. French
Sign Language was brought to the United States in 1816 by Thomas
Gallaudet, founder of the American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Conn.
He developed American Sign Language, a language of gestures and hand
symbols that express words and concepts.
- American Sign Language is considered the language of
the Deaf community and is used in the United States and Canada.
- American Sign Language is a distant language within the
scope of the world's languages, with its own syntactic, semantic, and
configurational rules.
- It is composed of manual gestures called signs in
combination with various types of non-manual grammar, such as mouth
morphemes, appropriate facial expression, body movement and many
more.
- Some of American Sign Language's grammatical features
include directional verbs, classifiers, rhetorical questions and
the sequential aspect. It has its own grammar that
does not in any way reflect the grammar of English.
- People who use American Sign Language use the physical
space in front of them to create the mental picture. American Sign
Language is suited to the eyes. The eyes see “the whole picture,"
therefore a signer can use more than one sign alongside.
Benefits
- Children learning American Sign Language generally
develop their first signed words at approximately the same age as children
who are acquiring oral language.
- Deaf children who learn sign language in preschool do
better in academics, such as learning to read and write English, as well
as better behaviorally and socially.
- American Sign Language is also far easier on a child’s
eyes than any of the Manual Codes of English Systems.
- Deaf children of deaf parents are better linguistically
than deaf peers born of hearing parents. This could be due to early
language acquisition.
- American Sign Language can allow children to maximize
their higher education.
Trends
Mainstreaming
- Mainstreaming is a placement option in which children
go to regular classes, as well as going to some special education
classes.
- These classes are called resource classes and are
taught by specially trained teachers.
- Deaf students who are mainstreamed miss out on the
feeling of belonging that individuals from the Deaf culture associate with
their residential schools, and their experience is very different from
those who attend residential school. Mainstreamed students often are
singled out in many respects.
- One common complaint about mainstreaming is that the
children are only in the regular classrooms for non-core subjects such as
Physical Education and Art.
Benefits
- A child that is in these types of environments has the
opportunity to meet and interact with hearing peers.
- They are also exposed to a regular curriculum.
- These children often learn how to be
self-starters.
- They develop excellent study habits that serve them
well as adults, which could be in part because of their inability to
understand the teacher and the other students.
- These students
Exclusive Education
Inclusion allows the student with disabilities to receive
instruction in the general education with special education services coming to
them. For example: a student with difficulties in reading would have the
special education teacher come to them to receive their instruction in the same
room with their non-disabled peers. Some school districts call this
collaboration, in which the general education teacher and special education
teacher collaborate to provide instruction to all the students.
Benefits
Here are key findings
about the benefits of inclusion for children and families:
Families’ visions of a typical life for their children can come true.
All parents want their
children to be accepted by their peers, have friends and lead “regular” lives. Inclusive
settings can make this vision a reality for many children with disabilities.
Children develop a positive understanding of themselves and others.
When children attend
classes that reflect the similarities and differences of people in the real
world, they learn to appreciate diversity. Respect and understanding grow when
children of differing abilities and cultures play and learn together.
Friendships develop.
Schools are important
places for children to develop friendships and learn social skills. Children
with and without disabilities learn with and from each other in inclusive
classes.
Children learn important academic skills.
In inclusive
classrooms, children with and without disabilities are expected to learn to
read, write and do math. With higher expectations and good instruction children
with disabilities learn academic skills.
All children learn by being together.
Because the philosophy
of inclusive education is aimed at helping all children learn, everyone in the
class benefits. Children learn at their own pace and style within a nurturing
learning environment.
Residential
Schools
- A residential school is for students who are deaf or
have a severe hearing impairment. It has a comprehensive academic,
health, and socialization program including dormitory. Most programs
serve preschool ages through grade 12.
- Residential life as the ideal opportunity for students
who are deaf to become familiar with and acculturated into the Deaf
community.
- The Deaf culture is passed on from one generation to
the next through the residential school, where they learn such things as
Deaf folklore and folk life from other children, Deaf teachers and Deaf
house parents.
- Most schools accept students based on degree of hearing
loss, academic needs, parental choice, and other factors.
- Any child with a hearing loss becomes a member of the
Deaf culture, but through schooling residential schools.
- Recently residential schools enrollment has decreased
because of mainstreaming becoming an option for Deaf students, as well the
population of Deaf children has decreased because of recent vaccinations.
Therefore many residential schools have shut down.
Benefits
- The schools are designed with the needs of deaf
students in mind.
- The opportunity for peer interaction is available
because of the variety of after school activities.
- Deaf children have adult Deaf role models.
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