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Selena - I have a Hayley, also, soon to be 14 and an eighth grader

at Western PA school for the Deaf.

How wonderfully awesome. Hailey was delayed so much we thought of Indiana

School for the Deaf, but it was just too far away for us.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

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Selena - I have a Hayley, also, soon to be 14 and an eighth grader

at Western PA school for the Deaf.

How wonderfully awesome. Hailey was delayed so much we thought of Indiana

School for the Deaf, but it was just too far away for us.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Yahoo!

Messenger with Voice.

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Guest guest

Selena - I have a Hayley, also, soon to be 14 and an eighth grader

at Western PA school for the Deaf.

How wonderfully awesome. Hailey was delayed so much we thought of Indiana

School for the Deaf, but it was just too far away for us.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Yahoo!

Messenger with Voice.

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> We have similar oddities ... Ian has a slower than normal

processing speed

> and sometimes signing seems to bypasses some places in his brain

and he

> understands more quickly. >>>>

Jake is an odd creature. He took the processing test they gave

without cueing and it was significantly impaired. Dr. Berlin asked

the school to do the same test using cued speech and he did pretty

much the same on it that time. He gave me an explanation but I can't

recall what the heck it was....needless to say it is not AUDITORY

processing really it is processing higher up in the brain.

He also does better if you let him type it or if he dictates to me on

large assignments. We have to finish his DARE essay tonight. He has

tried for a week to write it and it is like 1-2nd grade maybe. He

has great ideas, is very bright but it just does not come out on

paper.

That is one reason I am a bit worried about the school he will most

likely be at because it is the Paideia method that has lots of group

work and discussions and apparently projects.

We had been told in the past he may need an Alpha Smart. We also

just had brotehr tested for autism spectrum and he is not autistic,

just the bipolar and severe ADHD with processing and written language

issues and they are getting him an alpha smart.

On CICIRCLE we talk alot obout cognitive issues of vestibular

disorders and Jake fits most of the info in the articles.

Elaine

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> We have similar oddities ... Ian has a slower than normal

processing speed

> and sometimes signing seems to bypasses some places in his brain

and he

> understands more quickly. >>>>

Jake is an odd creature. He took the processing test they gave

without cueing and it was significantly impaired. Dr. Berlin asked

the school to do the same test using cued speech and he did pretty

much the same on it that time. He gave me an explanation but I can't

recall what the heck it was....needless to say it is not AUDITORY

processing really it is processing higher up in the brain.

He also does better if you let him type it or if he dictates to me on

large assignments. We have to finish his DARE essay tonight. He has

tried for a week to write it and it is like 1-2nd grade maybe. He

has great ideas, is very bright but it just does not come out on

paper.

That is one reason I am a bit worried about the school he will most

likely be at because it is the Paideia method that has lots of group

work and discussions and apparently projects.

We had been told in the past he may need an Alpha Smart. We also

just had brotehr tested for autism spectrum and he is not autistic,

just the bipolar and severe ADHD with processing and written language

issues and they are getting him an alpha smart.

On CICIRCLE we talk alot obout cognitive issues of vestibular

disorders and Jake fits most of the info in the articles.

Elaine

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Guest guest

>

> How wonderfully awesome. Hailey was delayed so much we thought of

Indiana School for the Deaf, but it was just too far away for us.

>

I have heard a lot of good things about Indiana School for the Deaf.

Mine is a residential student and she is about 3.5 hours away. We

moved here to this state so she could attend this school.

>

>

>

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>

> How wonderfully awesome. Hailey was delayed so much we thought of

Indiana School for the Deaf, but it was just too far away for us.

>

I have heard a lot of good things about Indiana School for the Deaf.

Mine is a residential student and she is about 3.5 hours away. We

moved here to this state so she could attend this school.

>

>

>

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Guest guest

At w hat age did she start attending? Hailey is only 4 and i can't imagine

haveing her 4 hours away.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

Yahoo! Mail goes everywhere you do. Get it on your phone.

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Guest guest

At w hat age did she start attending? Hailey is only 4 and i can't imagine

haveing her 4 hours away.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

Yahoo! Mail goes everywhere you do. Get it on your phone.

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Guest guest

At w hat age did she start attending? Hailey is only 4 and i can't imagine

haveing her 4 hours away.

Selena

Mom to:

8 1/2, LD

7, DSI, Kidney issues and Child Onset Bipolar Disorder

6, ODD, ADHD, LD

5, DSI and Physcomotor Eppliepsy

Hailey 4, DSI, and Severe Bilatereal Sensory-neural Hearing Loss (aided

6-4-05)

and the 16 wonderful special ed kids I teach everyday! Go NORTHWOOD!!!!!!

---------------------------------

Yahoo! Mail goes everywhere you do. Get it on your phone.

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Guest guest

She started at WPSD when she was 12.5 - January 17, 2005. I did not

find the right residential school in California for her so we moved to

PA.

Having said that, I don't knwo that I could either. There are a few

little deaf kids who have been attending since the age of 2. Parents

do the best they can and there are some rural areas here.

> At w hat age did she start attending?

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She started at WPSD when she was 12.5 - January 17, 2005. I did not

find the right residential school in California for her so we moved to

PA.

Having said that, I don't knwo that I could either. There are a few

little deaf kids who have been attending since the age of 2. Parents

do the best they can and there are some rural areas here.

> At w hat age did she start attending?

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Guest guest

Hi ,

Thank You so much for your opinion and suggestions as well as to everyone in

this group. I have only been a member for a couple of weeks and it has been so

wonderful to talk to everyone here. Everybody has something so positive and

helpful to say.

For some reason it sounds like my daughter Alyanna is kind of like Hailey.

Alyanna does both (sign language and verbal) but she gets excited when we sign

some words to her. She also thinks she's a teacher so we sit with her and she

gives us lessons. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I

heard so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I get

scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do we have to go

to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the actual procedure life

threatning?

Sorry for all the questions.....I just have so many!!!!

Thanks everyone again for listening :)

wrote:

-

Sign language is important in our family. Hayley was raised

signing. She is 13. She also wears a CI and a hearing aid and

receives speech therapy at her school. She signs and speaks but

does much better signing only.

It is really hard sometimes to get to sign classes. There are a

whole host of books you can buy as well as if you type ASL browser -

well, go here:

http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/aslweb/browser.htm

that might help you. But please don't feel bad and take your cues

from Alyanna; maybe she would enjoy you learning some signs and then

maybe not!

Where are you? I can help point you to resources in CA and PA.

Now, about the other things you mention - cochlear implant - this

would be up to you and your family and I agree, you need to research

this before any decision is made. I know a lot of deaf kids since

my daughter goes to deaf school and they are all profoundly deaf and

they all wear hearing aids, so it must help. (38 have CIs out of

200). The school has audiologists that get the kids earmolds, etc,

so there must be some reason why all these kids wear aids! Is your

daughter only deaf in the one ear? Never mind, I went back and

read. With a severe - profound loss in one ear, that ear can be

implanted and the moderate - severe ear can be helped by a hearing

aid.

About holding Alyanna the daughter back. I kept mine in

Kindergarten for 1/2 day and then the other half day, she went to

first grade. It was a good move. I am also considering asking her

school about keeping her one more year where she is now. I think

its likely better to keep them back younger vs. when they are

older. Just my two cents about that.

Hope this helps you,

mary

->

> Also, my daughter knows alot of sign language at school but they

also use verbal communication. At home we use verbal, as well as our

family, she does very well understanding us but I want to learn sign

language to make her feel better. They offered classes at her school

but I only when to a couple because of the schedule. Sometimes I

feelt very guilty but at times I just feel like there is always a

next class and is not that bad because she does so well with verbal

communication and she really does not need it. Everybody that we

meet the first question they ask me is " do you know sign language " ?.

I just feel really stupid saying " a little " .

>

> Sooooo I had a question for all parents..... How do you

communicate with your child? Is sign language very very important?

>

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.

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Guest guest

Hi ,

Thank You so much for your opinion and suggestions as well as to everyone in

this group. I have only been a member for a couple of weeks and it has been so

wonderful to talk to everyone here. Everybody has something so positive and

helpful to say.

For some reason it sounds like my daughter Alyanna is kind of like Hailey.

Alyanna does both (sign language and verbal) but she gets excited when we sign

some words to her. She also thinks she's a teacher so we sit with her and she

gives us lessons. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I

heard so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I get

scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do we have to go

to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the actual procedure life

threatning?

Sorry for all the questions.....I just have so many!!!!

Thanks everyone again for listening :)

wrote:

-

Sign language is important in our family. Hayley was raised

signing. She is 13. She also wears a CI and a hearing aid and

receives speech therapy at her school. She signs and speaks but

does much better signing only.

It is really hard sometimes to get to sign classes. There are a

whole host of books you can buy as well as if you type ASL browser -

well, go here:

http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/aslweb/browser.htm

that might help you. But please don't feel bad and take your cues

from Alyanna; maybe she would enjoy you learning some signs and then

maybe not!

Where are you? I can help point you to resources in CA and PA.

Now, about the other things you mention - cochlear implant - this

would be up to you and your family and I agree, you need to research

this before any decision is made. I know a lot of deaf kids since

my daughter goes to deaf school and they are all profoundly deaf and

they all wear hearing aids, so it must help. (38 have CIs out of

200). The school has audiologists that get the kids earmolds, etc,

so there must be some reason why all these kids wear aids! Is your

daughter only deaf in the one ear? Never mind, I went back and

read. With a severe - profound loss in one ear, that ear can be

implanted and the moderate - severe ear can be helped by a hearing

aid.

About holding Alyanna the daughter back. I kept mine in

Kindergarten for 1/2 day and then the other half day, she went to

first grade. It was a good move. I am also considering asking her

school about keeping her one more year where she is now. I think

its likely better to keep them back younger vs. when they are

older. Just my two cents about that.

Hope this helps you,

mary

->

> Also, my daughter knows alot of sign language at school but they

also use verbal communication. At home we use verbal, as well as our

family, she does very well understanding us but I want to learn sign

language to make her feel better. They offered classes at her school

but I only when to a couple because of the schedule. Sometimes I

feelt very guilty but at times I just feel like there is always a

next class and is not that bad because she does so well with verbal

communication and she really does not need it. Everybody that we

meet the first question they ask me is " do you know sign language " ?.

I just feel really stupid saying " a little " .

>

> Sooooo I had a question for all parents..... How do you

communicate with your child? Is sign language very very important?

>

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

Hi ,

Thank You so much for your opinion and suggestions as well as to everyone in

this group. I have only been a member for a couple of weeks and it has been so

wonderful to talk to everyone here. Everybody has something so positive and

helpful to say.

For some reason it sounds like my daughter Alyanna is kind of like Hailey.

Alyanna does both (sign language and verbal) but she gets excited when we sign

some words to her. She also thinks she's a teacher so we sit with her and she

gives us lessons. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I

heard so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I get

scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do we have to go

to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the actual procedure life

threatning?

Sorry for all the questions.....I just have so many!!!!

Thanks everyone again for listening :)

wrote:

-

Sign language is important in our family. Hayley was raised

signing. She is 13. She also wears a CI and a hearing aid and

receives speech therapy at her school. She signs and speaks but

does much better signing only.

It is really hard sometimes to get to sign classes. There are a

whole host of books you can buy as well as if you type ASL browser -

well, go here:

http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/aslweb/browser.htm

that might help you. But please don't feel bad and take your cues

from Alyanna; maybe she would enjoy you learning some signs and then

maybe not!

Where are you? I can help point you to resources in CA and PA.

Now, about the other things you mention - cochlear implant - this

would be up to you and your family and I agree, you need to research

this before any decision is made. I know a lot of deaf kids since

my daughter goes to deaf school and they are all profoundly deaf and

they all wear hearing aids, so it must help. (38 have CIs out of

200). The school has audiologists that get the kids earmolds, etc,

so there must be some reason why all these kids wear aids! Is your

daughter only deaf in the one ear? Never mind, I went back and

read. With a severe - profound loss in one ear, that ear can be

implanted and the moderate - severe ear can be helped by a hearing

aid.

About holding Alyanna the daughter back. I kept mine in

Kindergarten for 1/2 day and then the other half day, she went to

first grade. It was a good move. I am also considering asking her

school about keeping her one more year where she is now. I think

its likely better to keep them back younger vs. when they are

older. Just my two cents about that.

Hope this helps you,

mary

->

> Also, my daughter knows alot of sign language at school but they

also use verbal communication. At home we use verbal, as well as our

family, she does very well understanding us but I want to learn sign

language to make her feel better. They offered classes at her school

but I only when to a couple because of the schedule. Sometimes I

feelt very guilty but at times I just feel like there is always a

next class and is not that bad because she does so well with verbal

communication and she really does not need it. Everybody that we

meet the first question they ask me is " do you know sign language " ?.

I just feel really stupid saying " a little " .

>

> Sooooo I had a question for all parents..... How do you

communicate with your child? Is sign language very very important?

>

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.

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dear

you are welcome. Okay. Florida School for the Deaf and Blind is

going to host the next ASDC conference in July, maybe June 07? This

will be the second conference I attend and I'm excited! Its in St.

Augustine. You do have a good resource right there, by the way!

Now on to your CI questions:

Hayley has worn a CI for 3 plus years, but many of the people in this

group has kids who have had CIs for much longer. It is not dangerous

and the surgery itself is not extra dangerous. For us we got there in

the morning and were home by 5 pm. You do not have to go to therapy

the rest of her life, I think just until she is a teenager maybe and

then some if she chooses -that would be up to your family and what

she wants and what you want to get from it. The therapy would help

her learn to listen (well, that is our experience), which would help

speech, in turn.

.. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I heard

so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I

get scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do

we have to go to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the

actual procedure life threatning?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dear

you are welcome. Okay. Florida School for the Deaf and Blind is

going to host the next ASDC conference in July, maybe June 07? This

will be the second conference I attend and I'm excited! Its in St.

Augustine. You do have a good resource right there, by the way!

Now on to your CI questions:

Hayley has worn a CI for 3 plus years, but many of the people in this

group has kids who have had CIs for much longer. It is not dangerous

and the surgery itself is not extra dangerous. For us we got there in

the morning and were home by 5 pm. You do not have to go to therapy

the rest of her life, I think just until she is a teenager maybe and

then some if she chooses -that would be up to your family and what

she wants and what you want to get from it. The therapy would help

her learn to listen (well, that is our experience), which would help

speech, in turn.

.. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I heard

so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I

get scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do

we have to go to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the

actual procedure life threatning?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Dear

you are welcome. Okay. Florida School for the Deaf and Blind is

going to host the next ASDC conference in July, maybe June 07? This

will be the second conference I attend and I'm excited! Its in St.

Augustine. You do have a good resource right there, by the way!

Now on to your CI questions:

Hayley has worn a CI for 3 plus years, but many of the people in this

group has kids who have had CIs for much longer. It is not dangerous

and the surgery itself is not extra dangerous. For us we got there in

the morning and were home by 5 pm. You do not have to go to therapy

the rest of her life, I think just until she is a teenager maybe and

then some if she chooses -that would be up to your family and what

she wants and what you want to get from it. The therapy would help

her learn to listen (well, that is our experience), which would help

speech, in turn.

.. I live in West Palm Beach,FL, but thank you for the offer. I heard

so many different things about the cochlear implant that sometimes I

get scared. Is it true that having that on can be very dangerous? Do

we have to go to therapy for the rest of her life for it? Is the

actual procedure life threatning?

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