Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Digest Number 2094

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Welcome to the group , you are in the right place! I've been through a

similar situation. My daughter is 12 and has a mod-severe loss and like your

Nate, she got her hearing aids at age 4. She had a lot of ground to make up,

and went to kindergarten twice. The first time without extra classroom

amplification, the second time with a soundfield system. It was like night and

day. The first time through, she didn't even learn the names of the letters

let alone what sound each one made, though the rest of the class did. Her

teacher said " she's just not ready yet " but I knew it was because she couldn't

hear well enough. Sure enough, the next year in kindergarten, she could hear

better because of the soundfield, and she still had trouble with phonics. She

couldn't hear the differences in the sounds of the letters, specifically the

voiced and unvoiced consonant pairs. We worked on that at home, and taught the

teacher the " acoustic highlighting " techniques for this that we learned from our

AV therapist and within a week or two she was one of the best readers in the

class. Had we not gotten this info and this specific help, her life at school

would have been very different. So it is important to figure out where in the

reading process he breaks down. I read a book a while ago called " The Words

they need " by someone. I think you can get it through AG Bell. It is

about literacy and language primarily for HOH kids. The author was a teacher of

the HOH who found that the Orton Gillingham methods worked well in teaching her

HOH kids to read. This is a multisensory method used with LD kids but she found

it worked wonders for HOH kids. There are many reading programs that use Orton

Gillingham methods, including mood Bell and . When president Bush

talks about research based reading programs in " no child left behind " law, he

is talking about these programs. However, schools are often loathe to provide

these methodologies. Why they don't is a long story, but you can find these

folks and pay yourself or work on getting your school system to pay.

One thing we did very early in our journey was to get an independent evaluation.

In our case we went to an oral school because our child was oral and knew no

sign. Our school system's evaluation wasn't worth doo doo. But the best thing

we ever did was get the folks who knew kids who couldn't hear to look at our

child and help us understand what her issues were and what we would need to

fight for. I can't tell you how invaluable this was. But because HOH is such a

low incidence thing, you really need expert help. And outside the school

system is usually where you find this.

Another thing to look into is how well he is hearing in the classroom. Because

not hearing well can cause isolation, lack of learning and a really bad

attitude! We went through this in third grade. Maggie's teachers had always

used the soundfield all day everyday, and even turned off the AC when teaching,

and made sure she sat close to a speaker (we had 3 in the room). Then in third

grade, the teacher decided she could hear when she wanted to hear and only used

the soundfield for a few hours per week! And Maggie's attitude and behavior

became awful, and we were getting notes home almost daily about what a poorly

behaved child we had. We were mystified because this was new to us, and then

we remembered the last time her behavior was so horrid, and that was before she

got her hearing aids. So I went to talk to the teacher and that's when I

learned she was using the soundfield so sparingly. We went round and round and

I finally told her that what we were seeing was totally different than our

experience over the past 3 years in the school and that the only difference I

could see was that she wasn't using the soundfield. I asked her to try it our

way for a week, and after a day and a half she called and admitted that we were

right and she was seeing a totally different child. There is an article that I

always give Maggie's teachers and you can find it on the web. It deals with

minimal hearing loss, but I tell the teachers that her loss is about 5

categories worse than minimal and the issues are the same only bigger. You can

find it here: http://www.totalhearing.net/child_faq_management.htm

We're glad you found us. A lot of us have been in the same spot and you will

get lots of varied advice. Use what works for your son and your family. And

feel free to ask lots of questions. in GA

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Welcome to the group , you are in the right place! I've been through a

similar situation. My daughter is 12 and has a mod-severe loss and like your

Nate, she got her hearing aids at age 4. She had a lot of ground to make up,

and went to kindergarten twice. The first time without extra classroom

amplification, the second time with a soundfield system. It was like night and

day. The first time through, she didn't even learn the names of the letters

let alone what sound each one made, though the rest of the class did. Her

teacher said " she's just not ready yet " but I knew it was because she couldn't

hear well enough. Sure enough, the next year in kindergarten, she could hear

better because of the soundfield, and she still had trouble with phonics. She

couldn't hear the differences in the sounds of the letters, specifically the

voiced and unvoiced consonant pairs. We worked on that at home, and taught the

teacher the " acoustic highlighting " techniques for this that we learned from our

AV therapist and within a week or two she was one of the best readers in the

class. Had we not gotten this info and this specific help, her life at school

would have been very different. So it is important to figure out where in the

reading process he breaks down. I read a book a while ago called " The Words

they need " by someone. I think you can get it through AG Bell. It is

about literacy and language primarily for HOH kids. The author was a teacher of

the HOH who found that the Orton Gillingham methods worked well in teaching her

HOH kids to read. This is a multisensory method used with LD kids but she found

it worked wonders for HOH kids. There are many reading programs that use Orton

Gillingham methods, including mood Bell and . When president Bush

talks about research based reading programs in " no child left behind " law, he

is talking about these programs. However, schools are often loathe to provide

these methodologies. Why they don't is a long story, but you can find these

folks and pay yourself or work on getting your school system to pay.

One thing we did very early in our journey was to get an independent evaluation.

In our case we went to an oral school because our child was oral and knew no

sign. Our school system's evaluation wasn't worth doo doo. But the best thing

we ever did was get the folks who knew kids who couldn't hear to look at our

child and help us understand what her issues were and what we would need to

fight for. I can't tell you how invaluable this was. But because HOH is such a

low incidence thing, you really need expert help. And outside the school

system is usually where you find this.

Another thing to look into is how well he is hearing in the classroom. Because

not hearing well can cause isolation, lack of learning and a really bad

attitude! We went through this in third grade. Maggie's teachers had always

used the soundfield all day everyday, and even turned off the AC when teaching,

and made sure she sat close to a speaker (we had 3 in the room). Then in third

grade, the teacher decided she could hear when she wanted to hear and only used

the soundfield for a few hours per week! And Maggie's attitude and behavior

became awful, and we were getting notes home almost daily about what a poorly

behaved child we had. We were mystified because this was new to us, and then

we remembered the last time her behavior was so horrid, and that was before she

got her hearing aids. So I went to talk to the teacher and that's when I

learned she was using the soundfield so sparingly. We went round and round and

I finally told her that what we were seeing was totally different than our

experience over the past 3 years in the school and that the only difference I

could see was that she wasn't using the soundfield. I asked her to try it our

way for a week, and after a day and a half she called and admitted that we were

right and she was seeing a totally different child. There is an article that I

always give Maggie's teachers and you can find it on the web. It deals with

minimal hearing loss, but I tell the teachers that her loss is about 5

categories worse than minimal and the issues are the same only bigger. You can

find it here: http://www.totalhearing.net/child_faq_management.htm

We're glad you found us. A lot of us have been in the same spot and you will

get lots of varied advice. Use what works for your son and your family. And

feel free to ask lots of questions. in GA

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

You can try looking periodically at closed sales on Ebay or online do a

search for refurbished aids. Or, you can get an estimate of the expected

life of the aids and prorate them. Please note that for donations worth over

$500, you must have a statement of value from them or it can be disallowed

if you're audited

Re: Digest Number 2094

> Hi, I was wondering if anyone has any advice for me. I donated my sons

old hearing aids to the Clinic last year. They could not give me

a value to claim on our income tax. Do any of you have an idea of how to

figure a value on used hearing aids? Thank you in advance

>

>

> 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.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

You can try looking periodically at closed sales on Ebay or online do a

search for refurbished aids. Or, you can get an estimate of the expected

life of the aids and prorate them. Please note that for donations worth over

$500, you must have a statement of value from them or it can be disallowed

if you're audited

Re: Digest Number 2094

> Hi, I was wondering if anyone has any advice for me. I donated my sons

old hearing aids to the Clinic last year. They could not give me

a value to claim on our income tax. Do any of you have an idea of how to

figure a value on used hearing aids? Thank you in advance

>

>

> 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.

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...