Hi, I'm a cookie-biter in my hearing loss (mid-frequency mild loss in my left, moderate in my right slipping into low frequency hearing loss). I grew up with normal hearing and I have little knowledge of ASL and the Deaf Community. I joined here to educate myself on my own hearing loss and also to understand the Deaf Community because I wish I had understood more about hearing loss as a child. It would have saved me depression about a year ago I went through.
Ambrosia is correct that normally, yes, with mild hearing loss that most of the time we can pick up sounds just as easy as any person with normal hearing, except that sometimes we just cannot understand the full context of what is being said. I so often with my own hearing loss in both ears I have a hard time understanding speech of certain inviduals because they talk so quietly in loud places. I wear my hearing aids at work because it is loud but oftI was given a hearing aid for my mild loss in my right ear and very rarely do I wear it, even at work. The feedback is terrible and drives me nuts - plus being having a cookie bite hearing loss I can hear low and high frequencies well...
I turn the television up and I do have problems when people knock on my apartment door - mostly because where the door is located that I believe someone with perfect hearing would have a hard time hearing it as well. I have a light flasher to let me know when people are at the door simply because I may think I've heard something and want to make sure there is someone at the door. Plus it allows me not to worry about wearing those stupid hearing aids all day.
Even with my loss as I've been told by so many I should function just fine. I get tired of trying to always rely on my guessing games to understand people cause they seem to mumble a lot (to me at least). I still need the visual cues when I'm tired of trying hear straight...or correctly. I can hear words unaided but they make no sense a lot the time (mainly for my right ear) because I'm stuck guessing at what they said. I could possibly have APD myself - never been tested for it and don't really care to.
But your son's mild loss can be totally different compared to the next person who has mild loss, especially if he has APD.
I see no problem with your son learning ASL - it would allow your son to rest when he is tired of trying to fit in because he is not "deaf" enough or "hearing" enough. Wearing hearing aids gets exhausting...trust me.
I think your son sounds like he could have an APD but I'm not a specialist. Not having your son wear his hearing aids at random will not do him no good when he may need them. Hearing aids don't always help with mild losses and your son can wear them, depending on his type of mild hearing loss, when he wants too or needs them. I've gotten to where I take mine off and on depending on the situations. In class I wear them. At work I wear only the one on the right because wearing one on my left ear would make things too loud and hurt my ear...sometimes I don't wear them at all.
Your son will have to learn what fits him in these situations. I grew up hearing fine (I think so anyways
) but I don't always wear my hearing aids everywhere like the audiologist wants me too. I learned what I can understand and what I can't with my loss when people speak.
Personally I never knew someone with a mild hearing loss could go to a deaf school - I always thought there had be higher level of hearing loss you needed to qualify and it depended on the schools looked at. I learned something today reading these forums on that.
I don't see why people are doubting deaf education though if that is what will benefit your son, then go for it. I just think you need to look at the academics and see which one will help your son the most in that field but which will also help accommodate your son the best. Maybe it is mainstream or maybe it is the deaf education route...
Also talk with your son and maybe explain which one will benefit him better in the future education wise? Allow to go to ASL summer immersion camps? I don't see why someone with a mild loss would only have to rely on speech only and go that route when they can benefit from ASL as well.
I wish I had the time to learn ASL...it would be wonderful to have to quit relying on hearing aids to understand full sentences all the time with what my professors are saying.