TheOracle
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i meant myself...in regards to eardrums...:p
What is this backlash against teachers?
I did not say that glasses was equivalent to hearing loss. I was saying that if it weren't for the glasses, then it would have been the shoes. Or something else. (About that time I started getting into fights and it all subsided, but anyway...) Kids are nasty in sixth grade, yes, but I'm 100% positive that having kids of all kinds around made me a little less ignorant than some when I left school.
Adults who encounter someone "different" for the first time tend to be nervous...while people who have had various exposures tend not to be the morons.
I'm not saying that mainstreaming always works. NO. I'm saying that I see why it's pushed. When I was in teacher ed, I was always taught that the LRE also pertained to mainstreaming...as in, students should be with the general ed as much as possible...can you direct me to some alternate case law so I can look that up? It would be good for me to know. Thanks
And...I do know what it's like to struggle because of a hearing loss. You asked, so I'm responding. My unilateral hearing loss isn't the same experience, but it doesn't mean I pick up on everything in class or in a conversation...I always have the TV up loud, sit in the front, and study faces so I can catch what I may have missed through speechreading. I RARELY know what my peers are saying when they ask questions. Again, I'm telling you because you asked. I can imagine it would be a lot more exhausting if I had bilateral hearing loss. My younger experiences could've just been because I was a weird combination of awkward and confident.
What is this backlash against teachers?
I did not say that glasses was equivalent to hearing loss. I was saying that if it weren't for the glasses, then it would have been the shoes. Or something else. (About that time I started getting into fights and it all subsided, but anyway...) Kids are nasty in sixth grade, yes, but I'm 100% positive that having kids of all kinds around made me a little less ignorant than some when I left school.
Adults who encounter someone "different" for the first time tend to be nervous...while people who have had various exposures tend not to be the morons.
I'm not saying that mainstreaming always works. NO. I'm saying that I see why it's pushed. When I was in teacher ed, I was always taught that the LRE also pertained to mainstreaming...as in, students should be with the general ed as much as possible...can you direct me to some alternate case law so I can look that up? It would be good for me to know. Thanks
but you had full access to everything that was happening did you? You didnt have to constantly ask people to reapeat themselves, sit in the classroom not understanding what the teacher was saying, missing out on what others were saying and ended up being isolated despite being surrounded by hearing peers?
Did you experience that?
At least in a large deaf/hh program or at a Deaf school, the kids have visual language around them so they have full access in the educational setting.
And...I do know what it's like to struggle because of a hearing loss. You asked, so I'm responding. My unilateral hearing loss isn't the same experience, but it doesn't mean I pick up on everything in class or in a conversation...I always have the TV up loud, sit in the front, and study faces so I can catch what I may have missed through speechreading. I RARELY know what my peers are saying when they ask questions. Again, I'm telling you because you asked. I can imagine it would be a lot more exhausting if I had bilateral hearing loss. My younger experiences could've just been because I was a weird combination of awkward and confident.