YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Deaf Education and Culture
Essays 61 - 90
In five pages the education theories of Weiner and Bandura are discussed....
Developing effective hospital-sponsored community outreach education programs in upper New York States requires attention not only...
In five pages this paper discusses the need for support services for families with infants who are deaf. Fifteen sources are cite...
general. Kennedy does an admirable job of demonstrating how the population explosion that the world is currently experiencing is i...
In fifteen pages this research paper considers the effects of a deaf sibling on other 'normal' siblings in terms of emotional and ...
This essay consists of two pages and discusses value systems in terms of education and counseling....
In five pages this paper discusses the US welfare system problems particularly as they pertain to deaf or non English speaking app...
In seven pages this paper examines how to test the IQs of hearing impaired and deaf individuals in terms of accommodations and the...
In eight pages this research paper argues that Deaf and Hard of Hearing individuals represents a group that should be classified a...
In fifteen pages the impact of having a deaf sibling on siblings who have developed normally is evaluated emotionally and psycholo...
In two pages this text is examined in a brief overview that focuses upon its portrayal of the social acceptance of the deaf commun...
In two pages a 1995 article on children's education and the parental role is reviewed....
In nine pages this paper examines teaching philosophies in this overview that explores the relationship between philosophy and edu...
In fourteen pages this research paper discusses the impact of physical education on children's health and fitness....
In nine pages the Asian system of education is examined in a contrast and comparison of structures in China, Korea, and Japan....
In five pages cultural difficulties for communities of hearing and deaf individuals are compared. Four sources are cited in the b...
to abide by her decision to communicate only in sign language. Young children acquire language skills by listening. From the tim...
these children may have to become involved on a civic level to request, require and demand accessibility to all areas of a school ...
cochlea and, in turn, electrical signals are passed on to the acoustic (auditory) nerve where they travel to the brain (Bowdler an...
They discovered that their daughter was deaf and they immediately began trying to get her to communicate in an oral world. Afte...
Ryan helps one to understand how there is nothing inherently wrong with being smart, unless the individual is a child who does not...
was. In addition, children from abusive families are likely to grow into abusers themselves. Now, were not intimating that...
rather than concentrating on the disabled individual as having "deficits" within themselves (the medical model). They look at the ...
something new. While ease of learning is not exactly the goal, the concept of generalist education helps students make a definite ...
inclusive educational practices. Their concerns are forged out of their struggles to get appropriate educational services for thei...
actress Anne Bancroft, who had one a Tony Award for her performance as Helen Kellers teacher Anne Sullivan in The Miracle Worker (...
- virtually all of them knew it - so that they could "talk" to their deaf friends (Groce). Not only that, but when Groce interview...
in reaching deaf and blind children who would otherwise tune out. When used to help children learn basic skills, it is referred to...
than creating automatons, passive people who have a misguided sense of reality (Freire 71). Despite Freires going somewha...
have HIV/AIDS and if they do, this isnt something they would likely share with their students), and how the topic is presented. It...