1 / 39

Welcome

Welcome. Disability, Diversity and Technology in Deaf Education. Agenda. Introductions Tour of Manitoba School for the Deaf Technology and the Hearing Perspective Technology and the Deaf Perspective The Real World Discussion Groups. Technology. ….from the hearing perspective.

mrinal
Télécharger la présentation

Welcome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome Disability, Diversity and Technology in Deaf Education

  2. Agenda • Introductions • Tour of Manitoba School for the Deaf • Technology and the Hearing Perspective • Technology and the Deaf Perspective • The Real World • Discussion Groups

  3. Technology ….from the hearing perspective

  4. Amplification • The backbone of the hearing perspective (underlying premise) • “we want the child to hear/speak” • “we want the child to be like us” (90% of Dhh children are born to hearing parents) • the Deaf world is different and scary!

  5. Horn shaped trumpets 1900s

  6. One-piece vacuum tube body aid (1947). This was the first model of hearing aids made with a printed circuit, and the model on display is the 5th such model made with the printed circuit.

  7. Analog hearing aids amplify sounds -- the trouble is they amplify all sounds equally • Digital hearing aids contain a computer chip, which analyzes the sound based on the person's hearing loss and listening situation, and then amplifies it in a way that accommodates for the volume and pitch of incoming sounds. It even adjusts for feedback. Like analog hearing aids, digital aids can be programmed for a variety of listening environments.

  8. Hearing aid simulation • http://www.phonak.com/consumer/hearing/hearinglossdemo.htm

  9. Cochlear implant • A cochlear implant is not the same thing as a hearing aid. • One part of the device is surgically implanted into the temporal bone (the bone surrounding the ear). It consists of a receiver-stimulator, which accepts, decodes, and then transmits an electrical signal to the brain. • The second part consists of a microphone/receiver, a speech processor, and an antenna. It receives the sound, converts the sounds into an electrical signal, and transmits it to the internal portion of the cochlear implant.

  10. Cochlear implant simulations • Cochlear Implant Demos.mht

  11. Such concentration on auditory signal is necessary that visual input will weaken the ability to “hear” and thus “speak” optimally.

  12. Technology • Technology and the Deaf Perspective

  13. Doorbell

  14. Phone

  15. Dlink/VPAD

  16. Bed Light/Vibration

  17. Baby Cry

  18. TV/Close Captioning/RWC

  19. Hearing Dog

  20. School Considerations • Computerized Notetaker • Interpreter • Dragon Speak • Dragon Sign (?!)

  21. The Real World • Discussion Groups

  22. Thank you for coming!

More Related