http://www.alldeaf.com/deaf-education/75411-mainstream-v-special-school.html
Spinning off my son's info from the other thread.
Thanks, deafdyke for your feedback.
Anakin, it was nice to hear about your education experience.
We are in Phoenix, AZ. We have a few choices here. We're currently in the Tempe school district which has an awesome preschool that my son attends.
Tempe Elementary School District I'm not sure what programs are available in the other schools after entering Kindergarden.
We may move in the next year or so, and face a new school district.
Other options are:
If his IEP recommends it, Welcome to our site.
If we wanted to go oral, Desert Voices (keywords: deaf, school, auditory, child, children, cochlear implant, talk, speak, speech, listen, hearing aids, hearing impaired)
Or, if we don't mind him on a long bus ride,Sequoia School for the Deaf adn hard of hearing Either campus is currently at least 30 minutes away.
William is very oral, and many people wouldn't know that he is hoh as he sounds like many young kids learning to talk, but he is still not 100% with the speech goals on his IEP and struggles to make himself understood at times. I think that going back to ASL would help give him a vocabulary boost and a way to express himself when we can't make out what he's saying.
The only time he's spent with other d/hh kids was a once a week class as a two-year old and then the semester in the Center for Hearing Impaired Children classroom at preschool. Otherwise, he's always been with hearies.
I would like to give him more opportunities to be with other d/hh kiddos. I don't want to close him off from that culture, because I want him to have every opportunity and experience possible. I would feel bad if later in life he resented me for not exposing him to everything.
As he gets older, he is much more willing to wear his HAs and seems to realize (finally?) that he can hear more when they are on. We still listen to music super-loud, but when the HAs are on, I don't get as much "What? What?" The other day in the car, he actually indicated that I needed to turn off the music, and face him, because he couldn't hear what I was saying.
His daycare teachers say that he has lots of friends and everyone seems to understand him. He isn't quite the "leader" that he was at his 1st daycare, but it's hard to come into a situation where everyone has grown up together and you're the newbie, even at that age.
Thanks for letting me ramble!
Spinning off my son's info from the other thread.
Thanks, deafdyke for your feedback.
Anakin, it was nice to hear about your education experience.
We are in Phoenix, AZ. We have a few choices here. We're currently in the Tempe school district which has an awesome preschool that my son attends.
Tempe Elementary School District I'm not sure what programs are available in the other schools after entering Kindergarden.
We may move in the next year or so, and face a new school district.
Other options are:
If his IEP recommends it, Welcome to our site.
If we wanted to go oral, Desert Voices (keywords: deaf, school, auditory, child, children, cochlear implant, talk, speak, speech, listen, hearing aids, hearing impaired)
Or, if we don't mind him on a long bus ride,Sequoia School for the Deaf adn hard of hearing Either campus is currently at least 30 minutes away.
William is very oral, and many people wouldn't know that he is hoh as he sounds like many young kids learning to talk, but he is still not 100% with the speech goals on his IEP and struggles to make himself understood at times. I think that going back to ASL would help give him a vocabulary boost and a way to express himself when we can't make out what he's saying.
The only time he's spent with other d/hh kids was a once a week class as a two-year old and then the semester in the Center for Hearing Impaired Children classroom at preschool. Otherwise, he's always been with hearies.
I would like to give him more opportunities to be with other d/hh kiddos. I don't want to close him off from that culture, because I want him to have every opportunity and experience possible. I would feel bad if later in life he resented me for not exposing him to everything.
As he gets older, he is much more willing to wear his HAs and seems to realize (finally?) that he can hear more when they are on. We still listen to music super-loud, but when the HAs are on, I don't get as much "What? What?" The other day in the car, he actually indicated that I needed to turn off the music, and face him, because he couldn't hear what I was saying.
His daycare teachers say that he has lots of friends and everyone seems to understand him. He isn't quite the "leader" that he was at his 1st daycare, but it's hard to come into a situation where everyone has grown up together and you're the newbie, even at that age.
Thanks for letting me ramble!