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Deaf children --- Enfants sourds --- Language --- Psychology --- Langage --- Psychologie --- Child Development. --- Child Psychology. --- Deafness --- Psychology. --- Language. --- In infancy & childhood. --- Deaf children - Psychology --- Deaf children - Language
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"Co-enrollment programming in deaf education refers to classrooms in which a critical mass of deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) students is included in a classroom containing mainly hearing students and which is taught by both a mainstream teacher and a teacher of the deaf. It thus offers full access to both DHH and hearing students in the classroom through "co-teaching" and avoids both academic segregation of DHH students and their integration into classes with hearing students without appropriate support services or modification of instructional methods and materials. Co-enrollment thus seeks to give DHH learners the best of both (mainstream and separate) educational worlds. Co-enrollment programming has been described as a "bright light on the educational horizon" for DHH learners, giving them unique educational opportunities and educational access comparable to that of hearing peers. Co-enrollment programming shows great promise, but research concerning co-enrollment programming for DHH learners is still in its infancy. This volume provides descriptions of 14 co-enrollment programs from around the world, explaining their origins, functioning, and available outcomes. Set in the larger context of what we know and what we don't know about educating DHH learners, the volume offers readers a vision of a brighter future in deaf education for DHH children, their parents, and their communities"--
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This book offers a readable, comprehensive summary including everything a parent or teacher would want to know about growing up deaf. Marschark studies topics ranging from what it means to be deaf and the uniqueness of Deaf culture to the medical causes of early hearing loss; from technological aids for the deaf to the many ways that the environment of home and school can influence a deaf child's chances for success in both academic and social circles. He makes sense of the most current educational and scientific literature, and also talks to deaf children, their parents, and deaf adults about
Deaf children. --- Deaf children --- Parents of deaf children. --- Deafblind children's parents --- Deafblind children --- Children, Deaf --- Deafness in children --- Hearing impaired children --- Language. --- Patients
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This volume considers the extent to which the use of sign language affects the course and character of cognitive development. The understanding of the relationship between language and cognition has occupied psychologists and linguists for centuries, and may be enhanced by the study of signing.
Cognition in children. --- Deaf children --- Sign language. --- Deaf --- Gesture language --- Language and languages --- Gesture --- Signs and symbols --- Cognition (Child psychology) --- Thought and thinking in children --- Child psychology --- Language. --- Means of communication. --- Sign language --- Semiotics --- Cognitive psychology --- Orthopedagogics --- Psycholinguistics
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Aimed at parents and teachers of deaf chidlren, this is a comprehensive guide to the challenges involved in raising and educating a deaf child. This second edition brings readers up to date on some of the dramatic changes that have happened in the field over the past eight years.
Deaf children. --- Deaf children --- Parents of deaf children. --- Deafblind children's parents --- Deafblind children --- Children, Deaf --- Deafness in children --- Hearing impaired children --- Language. --- Patients
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Deaf children are not hearing children who can't hear, and having a deaf child is not analogous to having a hearing child who can't hear. Beyond any specific effects of hearing loss, deaf children are far more diverse than their hearing age-mates. A lack of access to language, limited incidental learning and social interactions, as well as the possibility of secondary disabilities, mean that deaf children face a variety of challenges in language, social, and academic domains.In recent years, technological innovations such as digital hearing aids and cochlear implants have improved hearing and the possibility of spoken language for many deaf learners, but parents, teachers, and other professionals are just now coming to recognize the cognitive, experiential, and social-emotional differences between deaf and hearing children. Sign languages and schools and programs for deaf learners thus remain an important part of the continuum of services needed for this population. Understanding the unique strengths and needs of deaf children is the key.Now in its third edition, Marc Marschark's Raising and Educating a Deaf Child, which has helped a countless number of families, offers a comprehensively clear, evidence-based guide to the choices, controversies, and decisions faced by parents and teachers of deaf children today.
Deaf children --- Deaf college students --- Children with disabilities --- Parenting --- Language --- Means of communication --- Education.
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In dit boek beschrijven Knoors en Marschark hoe slechthorende en dove leerlingen leren en welke condities dat leren bevorderen. Zij gaan daarbij uit van een ecologische benadering van het onderwijs aan deze leerlingen: zowel kenmerken van de leerlingen zelf als van de onderwijscontext doen ertoe. Voortbouwend op alle beschikbare evidentie uit wetenschappelijk onderzoek over pedagogische en psychologische factoren die het leren van slechthorende en dove leerlingen beïnvloeden, benadrukken Knoors en Marschark keer op keer dat het lesgeven aan deze leerlingen niet identiek is aan het onderwijzen van horende leerlingen.In dit boek verkennen zij in afzonderlijke hoofdstukken factoren die van invloed zijn op het lesgeven aan leerlingen die slecht horen: hun taalvaardigheid en hun cognitieve, sociale en emotionele vaardigheden. Daarnaast komt op basis van wetenschappelijk onderzoek het taal-, lees-, schrijf- en rekenonderwijs aan bod. Ook wordt ingegaan op de belofte die multimediaal, computerondersteund onderwijs inhoudt en op kenmerken van de onderwijscontext en het effect ervan op lesgeven en leren. Het boek benadrukt het belang van passende en voortdurende scholing van leerkrachten van leerlingen die slecht horen. Het overbrugt de kloof tussen wetenschappelijk onderzoek en de onderwijspraktijk en schetst wegen om de opleiding van leerkrachten verder te verbeteren.https://www.standaardboekhandel.be/p/mijn-leerling-hoort-slecht-9789033498282
Orthopedagogics --- personen met een auditieve beperking --- orthopedagogiek --- Slechthorende kinderen ; onderwijs --- Hearing impaired --- Children --- Handbooks, manuals, etc. --- Education --- Aims and objectives --- kinderen --- slechthorende kinderen --- evidence based onderwijs --- Slechthorenden --- Doven --- 376.21 --- Doofheid --- Personen met een auditieve handicap --- Leren --- Lesgeven --- #KVHB:Doofheid; kinderen --- #KVHB:Gehoorstoornissen; kinderen --- 463.2 --- Doven en slechthorenden --- kinderen. --- slechthorende kinderen. --- evidence based onderwijs. --- 37621 --- KVHB:Doofheid; kinderen. --- KVHB:Gehoorstoornissen; kinderen. --- 4632 --- Doven en slechthorenden. --- Auditief gehandicapten --- Gehoorproblemen --- Slechthorende kinderen --- Dove kinderen --- Orthodidactiek --- Didactiek --- Zorgverbreding --- Persoon met een auditieve handicap --- Gehoorprobleem --- Slechthorendheid --- Kind met een auditieve handicap
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Teaching Deaf Learners: Psychological and Developmental Foundations explores how deaf students (children and adolescents) learn and the conditions that support their reaching their full cognitive potential -- or not. Beginning with an introduction to teaching and learning of both deaf and hearing students, Knoors and Marschark take an ecological approach to deaf education, emphasizing the need to take into account characteristics of learners and of the educational context. Building on the evidence base with respect to developmental and psychological factors in teaching and learning, they describe characteristics of deaf learners which indicate that teaching deaf learners is not, or should not, be the same as teaching hearing learners. In this volume, Knoors and Marschark explore factors that influence the teaching of deaf learners, including their language proficiencies, literacy and numeracy skills, cognitive abilities, and social-emotional factors. These issues are addressed in separate chapters, with a focus on the importance to all of them of communication and language. Separate chapters are devoted to the promise of multimedia enhanced education and the possible influences of contextual aspects of the classroom and the school on learning by deaf students. The book concludes by pointing out the importance of appropriate education of teachers of deaf learners, given the increasing diversity of those students and the contexts in which they are educated. It bridges the gap between research and practice in teaching and outlines ways to improve teacher education.
Deaf --- Education --- Means of communication --- Sourds --- Éducation --- Communication --- personen met een auditieve beperking --- computerondersteund onderwijs --- Sign language --- talenonderwijs --- taalverwerving --- Teaching --- communicatie --- cognitieve ontwikkeling --- cognitieve psychologie --- Social policy and particular groups --- Dove kinderen ; onderwijs --- Gesture language --- Speech-reading --- Speechreading --- Education of the deaf --- Speech --- Éducation. --- Communication. --- Deaf - Education --- Deaf - Means of communication
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"This landmark volume presents the latest research on language, literacy and numeracy, cognition, and social and emotional development of deaf learners by internationally-recognized researchers and practitioners. Chapters focus on the translation of research into evidence-based teaching practices in deaf education and thus the improvement of student outcomes through professional development for teachers"-- This volume presents the latest research from internationally recognized researchers and practitioners on language, literacy and numeracy, cognition, and social and emotional development of deaf learners. In their contributions, authors sketch the backgrounds and contexts of their research, take interdisciplinary perspectives in merging their own research results with outcomes of relevant research of others, and examine the consequences and future directions for teachers and teaching. Focusing on the topic of transforming state-of-the-art research into teaching practices in deaf education, the volume addresses how we can improve outcomes of deaf education through professional development of teachers, the construction and implementation of evidence-based teaching practices, and consideration of "the whole child," thus emphasizing the importance of integrative, interdisciplinary approaches. -- Provided by publisher.
Deaf --- Hearing impaired children --- Teachers of children with disabilities --- Teaching --- Education. --- Training of. --- Methodology. --- Education --- Training of --- Methodology --- spesialpedagogikk --- døve --- barn --- språk --- leseferdighet --- skriveferdighet --- matematikkferdigheter --- undervisning --- forskning --- kognisjon --- barns utvikling --- læring --- teknologi --- hørselshemmede --- elever --- emosjonell utvikling --- doofheid --- slechthorendheid --- Child. --- Children. --- Education of Hearing Disabled --- Enfants handicapés auditifs --- Enfants. --- Personnes sourdes --- children (people by age group). --- Methods. --- Éducation. --- Deaf - Education --- Hearing impaired children - Education --- Teachers of children with disabilities - Training of --- Teaching - Methodology --- Deaf people --- Hard of hearing children
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