Handbook for Educating Hard of Hearing Students
Published
Editor: The long awaited handbook on best practices for educating hard
of hearing post-secondary students has been published! This is a great
resource for anyone who serves hard of hearing or late-deafened people.
Your editor was a proud contributor to this effort!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
August 2007
University of Arkansas professors serve as lead editors for guidelines
offering help to better identify and serve college students who are hard
of hearing or deaf.
Most new college students find higher education much more difficult and
demanding than their high school classes were, and for hard of hearing and
deaf students the challenges can be magnified significantly.
An estimated one in 10 college students nationwide suffers hearing
loss. In addition to providing services to these students, colleges and
universities must know how to identify students who may need help but are
reluctant to ask for it.
Two University of Arkansas professors, Douglas Watson and John
Schroedel, served as lead editors for a new guidebook published for
colleges, universities and other service providers. Watson directs the
Rehabilitation Research and Training Center for Persons Who Are Deaf or
Hard of Hearing, which was established in 1982 in Little Rock. The center
is based in the College of Education and Health Professions at the
University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.
"This publication is expected to result in increased access to
postsecondary education for students who are deaf," Watson said. "We also
anticipate that it will increase resources for professionals serving this
population, increase use of technology for training activities and student
access and increase collaboration among state, regional and national
groups."
Hard of hearing all his life, Watson has worked in the field of
deafness rehabilitation for 43 years. He has written or edited 25 books or
monographs as well as numerous book chapters and journal articles.
John Schroedel, deaf since his early teens, has worked as a research
professor at the center from 1983 until his retirement in December 2006.
One of the nation's leading researchers in the field of postsecondary
education and career training for students who are deaf or hard of
hearing, Schroedel authored the first and second chapters, drawing
extensively from research conducted at the Little Rock center.
The new book, Hard of Hearing Students in Postsecondary Settings: A
Guide for Service Providers published in May by the University of
Tennessee Center on Deafness, includes numerous citations to related
research by Watson and Schroedel and other members of the center's staff
who also assisted in editing the book. It can be accessed online at
http://prcorder.csun.edu/media/1219hh-students/index.html.
The University of Arkansas Rehabilitation Research and Training Center
for Persons Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing established a national task
force two years ago that was co-sponsored by the Postsecondary Education
Programs Network-South center at the University of Tennessee. The
Tennessee program is an affiliate of the national PEPNet group, which is a
collaboration of four regional centers that are funded by U.S. Department
of Education grants to assist the nation's educational institutions in
more effectively addressing the postsecondary, vocational, technical,
continuing education and adult education needs of individuals who are hard
of hearing or deaf.
The publication will be free and downloadable from the PEPNet Web site.
The reader will be able to open individual sections or open the entire
document to print. PEPNet is mandated to serve all 50 states and their
postsecondary education and training programs, estimated at more than
3,000 programs.
In addition, the book is being distributed worldwide by the
Postsecondary Education Network-International, an international
partnership of colleges and universities serving the higher education
needs of students with hearing impairment. It was founded in 2001 by the
Rochester Institute of Technology in New York and the Tsukuba University
of Technology in Japan. PEN-International is funded by grants from the
Nippon Foundation of Japan.
While the book is intended primarily for service providers at the
postsecondary level, the information and resources included will also be
helpful to students and parents as they discuss plans for education.
Teachers, transition specialists and related staff of secondary programs
can also use the book as a tool when working with students as they move
from secondary to postsecondary education and training programs.
With the advances in technology, students have many more choices than
ever, but individual differences still play an important role in how well
the student understands the information presented, according to the book's
introduction by Marcia Kolvitz, director of the PEPNet-South center at the
University of Tennessee. An accommodation that works well for a lecture
may not be effective in a laboratory, meaning flexibility and creativity
are essential components to providing an accessible environment.
The authors also point out that, not only the cause of a person's
hearing loss, but also the timing of when a person suffers hearing loss
makes a difference in psychological, social and communication needs.
People who are deaf from an early age learn sign language, acquire deaf
peers and develop a self-identity as well their own unique lingual
community and cultural values. Comparable coping mechanisms are usually
not available for late-deafened or hard of hearing students. University
officials may have to overcome resistance on the student's part in order
to be of assistance, and the book offers insight on doing that.
The book addresses allocation of resources to meet the challenge of
better identifying and serving hard of hearing and deaf students, provides
assessments of how friendly a college is to students with disabilities and
dispels myths that can hinder effective delivery of services. One such
myth assumes that people with hearing losses know what their educational-
and employment-related problems are, but in reality many are isolated from
other people with similar problems and tend to minimize or even deny their
hearing disability.
It also provides extensive information about assistive listening
devices, an example of a communication questionnaire and contact
information for numerous resources.