Teaching English To Hearing Impaired Students
Teaching English To Hearing Impaired Students
Teaching English To Hearing Impaired Students
I. Introduction
There is a range of inclusive teaching strategies that can assist all students to
learn but there are some specific strategies that are useful in teaching a group which
includes students with hearing impairment:
Encourage students with hearing impairment to seat themselves toward the
front of the classroom where they will have an unobstructed line of vision.
This is particularly important if the student is using sign language, lip-
reading, relying on visual clues or using a hearing aid which has a limited
range.
Ensure that any background noise is minimised.
Repeat clearly any questions asked by students in the lecture or class before
giving a response.
Do not speak when facing the blackboard. Be aware that hands, books or
microphones in front of your face can add to the difficulties of lip-readers.
Students who lip-read cannot function in darkened rooms. You may need to
adjust the lighting in your teaching environment.
Allow students to record lectures or, preferably, make copies of your lecture
notes available. Flexible delivery of teaching materials via electronic media is
also particularly helpful for students who have difficulty accessing information
in the usual ways. For deaf students new technology and the internet in
particular, can be used to bridge many gaps.
During the English lessons teacher must adjust the methods and strategies
according to the students specific characteristics and individual needs.
When we start teaching a foreign language we always bear in mind the
different components of learning a foreign language receptive skills,
productive skills and the cultural awareness the new language opens.
For hearing impaired students the acquiring of receptive and productive skills
must focus on reading and writing rather than on listening and speaking.
The teacher must constantly insist on obtaining regular feedback from the
students in order to check their level of understanding and to adjust the pace.
Since the amount of information to be processed by language learners is high in the
language classroom, and considering the limitations of teaching English to people
with hearing impairments different memory strategies can be applied in order to
stimulate the learning process and especially for dealing with new words:
Studying the word with a pictorial representation of its meaning;
Connecting the new word to a previous personal experience;
Grouping words according to a topic;
Grouping words together within a storyline;
Studying the spelling of the word. People with hearing impairments have
highly developed visual memory;
Connecting the word with its synonyms and antonyms;
Using semantic maps of new words.