YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Education for the Deaf
Essays 61 - 90
In five pages this paper discusses the need for support services for families with infants who are deaf. Fifteen sources are cite...
In fourteen pages this research paper discusses the impact of physical education on children's health and fitness....
Ryan helps one to understand how there is nothing inherently wrong with being smart, unless the individual is a child who does not...
actress Anne Bancroft, who had one a Tony Award for her performance as Helen Kellers teacher Anne Sullivan in The Miracle Worker (...
inclusive educational practices. Their concerns are forged out of their struggles to get appropriate educational services for thei...
of the physical changes that can be made to repair or improve a deaf persons ability to perceive sound. For example, the developme...
In 1994, estimates suggest that upwards of 500,000 deaf Americans incorporated ASL into their daily communications, while many oth...
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 ...
classroom environment is therefore designed to encourage children to exercise control over the environment and to function with an...
Developing effective hospital-sponsored community outreach education programs in upper New York States requires attention not only...
This paper considers the importance of including students who are handicapped in physical education in six pages....
Education as it is thematically depicted in these Jamaica Kincaid stories is the focus of this comparative analysis consisting of ...
child improve their intonation, pitch and duration of speech sounds (St. Joseph Institute, 2001). This paper discusses speech tr...
something new. While ease of learning is not exactly the goal, the concept of generalist education helps students make a definite ...
in reaching deaf and blind children who would otherwise tune out. When used to help children learn basic skills, it is referred to...
- virtually all of them knew it - so that they could "talk" to their deaf friends (Groce). Not only that, but when Groce interview...
than creating automatons, passive people who have a misguided sense of reality (Freire 71). Despite Freires going somewha...
means of indoctrinating children and young people with the values that constitute the norm of their society. For Functionalists, t...
& Education Quarterly, 31, 202-229. This paper describes the way in which a "team of urban middle school educators developed a du...
dropping out of high school and many may well find, years down the line, that they now want a high school education. One author no...
are from a white European history can learn to appreciate others from other nations and cultures. For example, one author notes, "...
In relationship to the pros and the cons one author notes that the student can take classes from anywhere, can take classes on sub...
Once this is done the teacher can figure out reasonable objectives which involves the information being taught. An example is prov...
the fees and students came from "all walks of life," but primarily from the "poorer families of knights, or from among townspeople...
A 5 page review of the book by Thomas Spradley and James Spradley. 1 source....
In 5 pages this paper considers how to teach music to students with impaired hearing in an examination of various approaches. T...
how this is often the fault of the parents and society that insist they should be able to live in such a hearing world. The follow...
the language acquisition device" (p. 255). Others say that language development is a reaction to environment. This writer/tutor ...
the perception that the "melting pot" of American society worked better in previous generations. However, consider this quote conc...