Guest guest Posted December 20, 2003 Report Share Posted December 20, 2003 My daughter is 6. She received her CI in May after wearing HAs since 19 mo. She went to an oral school for the hearing impaired until Kindergarten. She is now retaking kindergarten in mainstream in our neighborhood. The teacher is great. She wears an FM. She gets 1/2 hr speech a day and 40 min/day of TOD. I also take her to 2 private AVTs during the week. Yet, she is still behind and while all the teachers love her and we get lots of support, education will always be hard for her. She is redoing Kindergarten so that she can be with language peers. She is happy, made some friends. I know she struggles. I don't know when it will become easier for her. I would not want her to be in the school for the deaf still. I think that as long as I keep on top of the teachers and stay informed I can assist her. I have all the concerns you do, especially socially. We are, so far, ok with our decision and cautiously optimistic. Diane survey: degree of loss/mainstream Hi Ladies. I'm perplexed and would like some help. To catch you up, (4.5) started to lose his hearing at 2.9. At 3.4 he was aided and said to have a mod-severe loss and has progressively gotten worse. His last check he had a 20 dc loss in both ears and is now severe-profound. Here is the problem. I have some people telling me he'll be fine in a " regular " school. He'll get a CI if needed, therapy and extra equipment in a classroom. It'll be challenging and he'll have to work hard but he should be just fine. Especially since he had 2.5 years of hearing and language (he talks with clear speech, mostly). Then I have others...specifically a lady who works at a special lab school at the university with deaf/hoh kids. She is telling me that he is going to have a very tough time because he is a deaf kid in a hearing school. He's going to miss so much and have a terrible time. We've always wanted him in the neighborhood school. A. I taught at that school and know everybody. B. Our neighborhood is full of kids and I want him to be at school with them. C. in Jr. and Senior High School if he grew up with these kids than I'm hoping the teasing stuff won't be so bad because all the kids are used to him. D. We've got a fairly supportive school district and I know what buttons to push. Now granted the lab school is supposed to be great and there are all sorts of kids there.....regular/blind/wheelchair/deaf/2nd language/ all that stuff. I know many parents who try to get their kid in that school and are denied. But....it's not the neighborhood school. What do you guys think? Where do your kids go and why? What type of loss do they have? Thanks. Mom to 4.5 severe-profound progressive since 2.9 2.5 hearing and teasing All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright restrictions. _____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 20, 2003 Report Share Posted December 20, 2003 Hi, My son went deaf in Kindergarten in his right ear and then in 4th grade his left ear went an he is now profound in the right and moderate to profound in the left. He has always gone to the neighboorhod school and sees himself as hearing. Since 4th grde he has been aided and as his loss has progressed he has found a good FM system and real time transcription services to be invaluable academically and sociallly. He will be going to High School next year and he would have to go to a new school without the kids he has grown up with and we have decided to move. Unfortuantely, the district we hava an interdistrict transfer with is not accepting interdistrict transfers of Special Ed. students so our son would have to go to a new high school, 3900 kids, and no one he knows. So, that is the caution I Would put out - try to make sure that your child is in the right " regular school " . The real struggle has been getting the needed services in place and keeping them there. Looking back I would not have done it differently. He has excelled and flourished in the hearing world and has learned how to manage it as best he can. Of course each situation is different. Please feel free to e mail me if you have questions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 20, 2003 Report Share Posted December 20, 2003 , You have a tough decision to make. You have people on two totally different ends of the educational system who both have very strong opinions. All I can say neither one is right or wrong. Every child is different. If you want him in a regular school then you need to get all the information about what sort of difficulties he is expected to have. It is not going to be peaches and cream for him. He will be a deaf child with a CI which does not correct deafness it only helps it. he will be able to hear sound granted, and probably understand quite a bit. An FM system in my opinion would be necessary for him to get optimal benefit, because there is still an issue with clarity as well as background noise. There is lots of info on the difficulties of deaf children in a normal classroom. If a child understands a lot people tend to forget that he still has difficulties, and sometimes he can get left behind. Sometimes he doesn't know that he misunderstood, that sort of thing. But they are right he may very well do wonderfully in a mainstreamed school, with some hard work. On the other hand a school for the Deaf might just be a good idea, they have programs that focus on communication and you can guarentee he won't get left behind, signing and speaking is wonderful, he has access to specialized therapists and things aren't quite as hard for him so he is able to focus more on learning. Now on the other hand as you mentioned you know the people at the other school, he has lots of friends in his neiborhood that he wants to be with and he would sort of be isolated from them. He may feel left out in his community. So what I suggest is that you visit both schools, and find out just what they plan on doing, make sure the mainstreamed school understands the spacific of a deaf child with a CI and that they are still deaf and have a hard time. Find out what type of programs the Deaf school has. You might find that the Deaf school has programs to get children ready for being mainstreamed. It might be a good idea depending on what their programs are that he go there for a year to get used to the CI and intensive therapy and then mainstream him. I don't know I am just trying to throw out all options The best thing you can do though is get a ton of info, info on difficulties of children with CI's and how it isn't normal hearing. info on the schools, and the pro's and con's of both, and then visit both schools and talk with your son and find out where he wants to go. Bring him with you to both schools. These are really tough decisions, and you have a lot of info from both sides but remember both sides are biased, so you have to be the one to un do that and make a decision. Neither side is right or wrong, they are both right, it just depends on your individual needs and which one can fit them better. -- survey: degree of loss/mainstream Hi Ladies. I'm perplexed and would like some help. To catch you up, (4.5) started to lose his hearing at 2.9. At 3.4 he was aided and said to have a mod-severe loss and has progressively gotten worse. His last check he had a 20 dc loss in both ears and is now severe-profound. Here is the problem. I have some people telling me he'll be fine in a " regular " school. He'll get a CI if needed, therapy and extra equipment in a classroom. It'll be challenging and he'll have to work hard but he should be just fine. Especially since he had 2.5 years of hearing and language (he talks with clear speech, mostly). Then I have others...specifically a lady who works at a special lab school at the university with deaf/hoh kids. She is telling me that he is going to have a very tough time because he is a deaf kid in a hearing school. He's going to miss so much and have a terrible time. We've always wanted him in the neighborhood school. A. I taught at that school and know everybody. B. Our neighborhood is full of kids and I want him to be at school with them. C. in Jr. and Senior High School if he grew up with these kids than I'm hoping the teasing stuff won't be so bad because all the kids are used to him. D. We've got a fairly supportive school district and I know what buttons to push. Now granted the lab school is supposed to be great and there are all sorts of kids there.....regular/blind/wheelchair/deaf/2nd language/ all that stuff. I know many parents who try to get their kid in that school and are denied. But....it's not the neighborhood school. What do you guys think? Where do your kids go and why? What type of loss do they have? Thanks. Mom to 4.5 severe-profound progressive since 2.9 2.5 hearing and teasing All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright restrictions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 --- You wrote: Here is the problem. I have some people telling me he'll be fine in a " regular " school. He'll get a CI if needed, therapy and extra equipment in a classroom. It'll be challenging and he'll have to work hard but he should be just fine. Especially since he had 2.5 years of hearing and language (he talks with clear speech, mostly). Then I have others...specifically a lady who works at a special lab school at the university with deaf/hoh kids. She is telling me that he is going to have a very tough time because he is a deaf kid in a hearing school. He's going to miss so much and have a terrible time. --- end of quote --- Hi - my older son, Tom is 11 years old, in 5th grade and has always been mainstreamed with services (he used to receive speech and special ed; he now gets just special ed). Tom has a severe loss. My younger son, Sam is 9 and in third grade with a profound loss. He tested out of special ed about 1-1/2 years ago and receives accommodations but not services. He's also been mainstreamed since the beginning. I think every child is different - Tom and Sam for the most part have done well in school. Tommy's hearing loss was diagnosed late (at 3-1/4 years) so we played catch-up with him and had him repeat first grade (best thing we ever did - he was young for his grade, also a boy). He also has the additional challenges of ADHD and a really high IQ so is really a moving target. We're fortunate that our school is part of the Schools Attuned program - they work hard to understand that every child learns differently and accommodate those differences. Both boys' teachers this year have been excellent matches for them as well. I would say since you seem to have an " in " at the school and presumably teachers are willing to learn is the basis of a really good start. I can't tell you what to do - maybe others on the list can be of more help. I do know that my boys love their school - not only have they done well academically but they fit in socially - and they have so far not had a " terrible time " . Good luck! Barbara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 It all depends on the school. My son had mild hearing loss when he started out and he was brutalized by teachers, the administration and as a result, thekids. The schools even went after us when we fought for his rights. He was then privately tutored by the school system because they had gotten themselves in so much trouble. He now has lost almost all of his hearing and is mainstreamed at the local middle school...actually we picked one out of his district...and he has quite a few friends and the teachers can't do enough for him! It's a dream school that truly cares, they don't allow any child to pick on another one and it is one of the most ethnically and economically diverse schools in the area. This and the school administration have instilled tolerance in the children and they will allow no intolerance to rear its ugly head, so the children are accepting and work well together. still struggles in his relationships due to inability to hear in a crowd, but he has friends, and in small settings does very well. He has always considered himself hearing and despite numerous attempts on our part to immerse him in a bicultural environment which included signing as well, he has been uncomfortable in the deaf world. He is an auditory learner who can't hear. He did learn cued speech at age 7 which taught him how to lipread and he is incredible at it now whereas he had no ability at all to lipread until he was specifically taught how and started to use cued speech. Your child will show you what he/she is comfortable with. Re: survey: degree of loss/mainstream > --- You wrote: > Here is the problem. I have some people telling me he'll be fine in > a " regular " school. He'll get a CI if needed, therapy and extra > equipment in a classroom. It'll be challenging and he'll have to > work hard but he should be just fine. Especially since he had 2.5 > years of hearing and language (he talks with clear speech, mostly). > Then I have others...specifically a lady who works at a special lab > school at the university with deaf/hoh kids. She is telling me that > he is going to have a very tough time because he is a deaf kid in a > hearing school. He's going to miss so much and have a terrible > time. > --- end of quote --- > Hi - my older son, Tom is 11 years old, in 5th grade and has always been > mainstreamed with services (he used to receive speech and special ed; he now > gets just special ed). Tom has a severe loss. My younger son, Sam is 9 and in > third grade with a profound loss. He tested out of special ed about 1-1/2 years > ago and receives accommodations but not services. He's also been mainstreamed > since the beginning. I think every child is different - Tom and Sam for the > most part have done well in school. Tommy's hearing loss was diagnosed late (at > 3-1/4 years) so we played catch-up with him and had him repeat first grade (best > thing we ever did - he was young for his grade, also a boy). He also has the > additional challenges of ADHD and a really high IQ so is really a moving target. > > We're fortunate that our school is part of the Schools Attuned program - they > work hard to understand that every child learns differently and accommodate > those differences. Both boys' teachers this year have been excellent matches > for them as well. > > I would say since you seem to have an " in " at the school and presumably teachers > are willing to learn is the basis of a really good start. I can't tell you what > to do - maybe others on the list can be of more help. I do know that my boys > love their school - not only have they done well academically but they fit in > socially - and they have so far not had a " terrible time " . > > Good luck! > > Barbara > > All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright restrictions. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 It all depends on the school. My son had mild hearing loss when he started out and he was brutalized by teachers, the administration and as a result, thekids. The schools even went after us when we fought for his rights. He was then privately tutored by the school system because they had gotten themselves in so much trouble. He now has lost almost all of his hearing and is mainstreamed at the local middle school...actually we picked one out of his district...and he has quite a few friends and the teachers can't do enough for him! It's a dream school that truly cares, they don't allow any child to pick on another one and it is one of the most ethnically and economically diverse schools in the area. This and the school administration have instilled tolerance in the children and they will allow no intolerance to rear its ugly head, so the children are accepting and work well together. still struggles in his relationships due to inability to hear in a crowd, but he has friends, and in small settings does very well. He has always considered himself hearing and despite numerous attempts on our part to immerse him in a bicultural environment which included signing as well, he has been uncomfortable in the deaf world. He is an auditory learner who can't hear. He did learn cued speech at age 7 which taught him how to lipread and he is incredible at it now whereas he had no ability at all to lipread until he was specifically taught how and started to use cued speech. Your child will show you what he/she is comfortable with. Re: survey: degree of loss/mainstream > --- You wrote: > Here is the problem. I have some people telling me he'll be fine in > a " regular " school. He'll get a CI if needed, therapy and extra > equipment in a classroom. It'll be challenging and he'll have to > work hard but he should be just fine. Especially since he had 2.5 > years of hearing and language (he talks with clear speech, mostly). > Then I have others...specifically a lady who works at a special lab > school at the university with deaf/hoh kids. She is telling me that > he is going to have a very tough time because he is a deaf kid in a > hearing school. He's going to miss so much and have a terrible > time. > --- end of quote --- > Hi - my older son, Tom is 11 years old, in 5th grade and has always been > mainstreamed with services (he used to receive speech and special ed; he now > gets just special ed). Tom has a severe loss. My younger son, Sam is 9 and in > third grade with a profound loss. He tested out of special ed about 1-1/2 years > ago and receives accommodations but not services. He's also been mainstreamed > since the beginning. I think every child is different - Tom and Sam for the > most part have done well in school. Tommy's hearing loss was diagnosed late (at > 3-1/4 years) so we played catch-up with him and had him repeat first grade (best > thing we ever did - he was young for his grade, also a boy). He also has the > additional challenges of ADHD and a really high IQ so is really a moving target. > > We're fortunate that our school is part of the Schools Attuned program - they > work hard to understand that every child learns differently and accommodate > those differences. Both boys' teachers this year have been excellent matches > for them as well. > > I would say since you seem to have an " in " at the school and presumably teachers > are willing to learn is the basis of a really good start. I can't tell you what > to do - maybe others on the list can be of more help. I do know that my boys > love their school - not only have they done well academically but they fit in > socially - and they have so far not had a " terrible time " . > > Good luck! > > Barbara > > All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright restrictions. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 I agree that it depends on the school. Some schools just do not have the time or staff or patience -- and, despite the fact that they should accomodate, they make everything a battle. Fortunately, we are now in an excellent school.... Demi is 11 (5th grade), mainstreamed in local school district and always has been mainstreamed. She started with a mild sloping to moderate loss (Kindergarten) and is now moderate sloping to profound. She is aided bilaterally and uses an FM system in school. Her grades are all As and Bs. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 I agree that it depends on the school. Some schools just do not have the time or staff or patience -- and, despite the fact that they should accomodate, they make everything a battle. Fortunately, we are now in an excellent school.... Demi is 11 (5th grade), mainstreamed in local school district and always has been mainstreamed. She started with a mild sloping to moderate loss (Kindergarten) and is now moderate sloping to profound. She is aided bilaterally and uses an FM system in school. Her grades are all As and Bs. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 Hi , It is such a tough decesion. My daughter was born with no hearing in her left ear and normal in her rt ear. That was until she was 7, than a progressive loss and was implanted in Feb at the age of 9. She is doing great with the implant and is mainstreamed in the 5th grade and does well. Our school system has given me everything I have asked for. She recieves 1 hour 3x week of auditory therapy for the CI, they just purchased the microlink system for her ci and ha, and she also recieves c-print (simillar to cart). Now all that being said I have thought of looking at a school with a special program for deaf/hoh only because I worry about jr high and hs, but if our town school continues to provide all these services I really don't want to send her on an hour bus ride each way every day. Socially she sometimes has a tough time at school, but I have seen an improvement this year with the ci working so well. I just have to add this as far as how well she does with it. She has always loved singing dancing and acting, and has been in musical theater since she was 5 (with normal hearing in 1 ear). Last year was very tough for her as she rapidly lost the rest of her hearing, and it took a few months for her to get any benefit from the ci. This weekend she auditioned for Godspell at her theater school. It included a singing and improv audition. She was cast in the childrens chorus. I was in tears when they accepted her to realize how far she has come in 9 months post turn-on. These kids can do anything! Good luck with your decesion, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 2003 Report Share Posted December 22, 2003 In a message dated 12/20/2003 1:51:55 PM Eastern Standard Time, weehoo8@... writes: > Where do your kids go and why? What type of loss do they have? > > Our son Ian is now 13 and in 8th grade. He has always been mainstreamed in the neighborhood schools because we did not discover his hearing loss until second grade. At that point we had no clue, but he had obviously been losing his hearing for quite a while since he was lip reading very successfully. He was initially diagnosed with ADD and that was how his " zoning out " was explained, it was actually due to losing track of what was going on in class, and being a quiet kid, he did not act out and disrupt class, he simply amused himself. Being an HOH kid in a regular school is hard ... but being different in any way is hard, kids can be mean. They can also be marvelous. I've told this story before but ... in our neighborhood elementary school there seemed to be a rule about not picking on the " special " kids, it is considered bad form. You could be teased for having the wrong sneakers or a dumb hat, but no picking on kids with actual handicaps. Ian's hearnig aides somehow placed him in the protected group even though he was not special ed in any other way. Once they're in Junior High, this rule expires. But by then our Ian could have handled himself and no one has ever teased him. Well, that's not exactly true. One very tall bully-type called him a " shrimp " every day in the lunch-line, so Ian started calling him the Jolly-mean-giant. The name calling became a battle of wits and they became friends. And a girl once threatened to beat him up if he wouldn't be her boyfriend. But none of that had anything to do with hearing loss. Ian considers himself hard-of-hearing not Deaf. Now that he has lost enough hearing, he qualifies for admission into the deaf schools near us but he wants to attend " regular " high school next year. Our choice was to keep him in the neighborhood schools and fight until he had appropriate services for the same reasons you list. He has known some of these kids since he was 3, and he is comfortable with the social structure. He has learned how to cope and how he is comfortable interacting. Ian has a TOD every day who has worked with him on many things, from language (idioms) and writing skills to coping skills (note taking and pacing teachers) He has an FM system that all his teachers are trained to use, and specialized testing adaptions for oral exams. Being in the neigborhood schools is not easy. Ian works much harder on things than his friends do, he spends more time at home studing and learning the details that he misses in class. We spent his 4th and 5th grade years practically home-schooling him, what with all the work we did in the evenings. But once his services were established, everything fell into place for him. He still works harder than any of his friends, but it is where he is happiest and he is succeeding. Every kid is different, and I don't think any of our choices was " the easy way. " We had to find our way based on what we thought was best for our son ... the only thing I would have done differently would be to have contacted the lawyer sooner. The school placement was right, it was the school district that was out of step. Ian is the only maintreamed child in the district who receives the services of a TOD Best -- Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 22, 2003 Report Share Posted December 22, 2003 My daughter Caitlin has a moderate to sever hearing loss and was diagnosed and got hearing aids at age 3.5 She has been in a special ed., total communication, hearing impaired class for preK, K and 1 and has been doing really well. Her speech is getting clearer and more fluent and her reading is above grade level. She is currently mainstreaming in the hearing first grade about an hour per day for math (plus recess and lunch) and she has several good friends form that class. We have been torn between having her spend more time mainstreaming vs. time in the special ed class because she is getting so much from the special ed class and so much individual attention. This year, due to financial " problems " in California, she has no interpreter for her daily math class in the hearing classroom. This has been an emotional challenge as she really missed the support she had before, but after making a connection with the teacher, all is well now. (Unfortunately, the other children in her class who really needed the interpreter have stopped mainstreaming.) The elementary school goes to fifth grade. We hope to get her into the same school as her twin brother at that time. We have had encouraging conversations with the schools admissions officer about her attending. The school doesn't have experience with hearing impaired kids, but is very open to it. We just don't know how much support she will need in five years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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