This book starts with Louis and Thomas. Louis and Thomas have children, sons, and blues. When Bruce was three years old, he ran into measles or rubella in Germany. After discovering this, Rui found out that she was pregnant with a second child. When Lewis took the blues to the doctor to get all the information about measles, the doctor was concerned about Louis' pregnancy and even thought she was not that far. Doctors say that people with these measles are likely to cause birth defects in their babies. Of course, after hearing this news, Thomas and Rui experienced a very worried and anxious nine months until the baby was born.
Lynn was born in April 1965. She is very happy with her parents.
Then the doctor recommended her to another specialist, audiologist at the pediatric hospital.
My family went to California to go to John Tracy Clinic. This is a clinic specializing in hearing loss; my family finally think that I can get the answer they desperately want. The audiologist they met with Rin and tested was Lady Caldwell. But first, Spradley met with Dr. Murphy who tested phosphorus to see how she developed mentally and physically. Even though Lynn was not walking, she was still quite well if there was something to hold her around and walk. She is helping to wear clothes except talking, and Dr. Murphy can not hear saying she is a normal child. Lynn's age is so small that her body grows slowly, but she is normal. This made Spradley feel comfortable as they were concerned that the cognitive impairment of phosphorus had disappeared.
When I went to Mrs Caldwell for the test, they were waiting for the game. Lin must go through a series of tests. Rin finally suffered from severe hearing impairment. With every second's cycle, Phosphorus lost 95 decibels, and his family constantly remembered that Lynn was not completely hearing-impaired, but only by having a severe hearing impairment will improve maybe. Lynn's age test is unreliable and family insists
Hearing impaired people like me are the moving records of parents who reach out with a woman's baby. The love, hope, anxiety of all the nephew's hearing parents shows strength and simplicity here. In conclusion, Lynn Pradley looked back on her teen nephew, her struggle in education, communication, and the discovery that she was the focus of her father and uncle's books. I was like a gentleman I need to read for parents, relatives, and friends of all places.
In the Netherlands, one in 1,000 people has hearing impairment. In other words, it is the 3rd year at birth or after birth. About 100 children are diagnosed with deafness every year. Approximately 5 to 10% of children with hearing impaired in the Netherlands have hearing impairment in their parents (Knoors, 2001). The general development stages of the acquisition of SLN are reviewed by Schermer, Fortgens, Harder, and De Nobel (1993), which are later complemented by the results of several research projects initiated primarily by Baker, Van den Bogaerde and Crasborn It was done (2003). Children who acquired SLN seem to have experienced developmental stages similar to other sign language learners like ASL and BSL (Schermer, 1990). Research on SLN acquisition is modest compared to ASL and BSL, but several entity studies were born (Bos, 1994, 1995; Coerts, 2000, On the basic word order of SLN; Fischer & Van der Hulst, 2003, SLN Compare other sign language)
Language development in interaction between hearing impaired children and deaf and hearing impaired people: a longitudinal study in the Netherlands
Birch reviewed various eras of deaf education using feminist and political views. She explained the influence of sign language and wax culture education refusal on deaf women. They believe they have experienced deprivation and the deprivation of rights in education / occupational opportunities and social choices. The Brueggemann chapter further explores the Deaf woman's identity through the literature by observing the autobiographical texts of the Deaf, in particular the Deaf woman as forming and expressing himself as a writer .
The monk's story is the history of hearing-impaired education, described in Harlan Lane's "Psychic Hearing" and then analyzed in his "Men of Mercy". These are revolutionary texts of the Deaf movement. For example, in Spain of the 16th century, only those who guilty were permitted to inherit property and titles, so the family members of their immediate family gave language education to their nephews. But Abbe de l'Epee has released monks from illiterate isolated prisons for more than 200 years by learning their handmade languages in Paris deaf people and using it to teach French .