SignWriting List Forum | |||
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From:
Nancy Sager Date: Thu Jun 1, 2000 9:19 pm Subject: Re: Chami | |
Hi! I am Nancy Sager, Deaf and Hard of Hearing Programs Consultant for the California Department of Education. Thank you for the lovely introduction to your daughter. I hope you get responses from many other parents. Best of luck to you. If you live in California, and if I can ever be of assistance to you, please don't hesitate to contact me. My phone # is 916 327-3868 and my e-mail address is >>> Linda Erickson 06/01 12:25 PM >>> Greetings, I would love to speak and receive messages back from parents and professionals about deaf children. I have a beautiful, energetic, ambitious, strong minded five year old daughter whom is profoundly deaf. Her name is Lindsey. Lindsey just graduated from 3 years of special ed preschool. Prior to that, 2 1/2 years of the Infant Learning Program. Lindsey is a very intelligent young girl, who is also gifted with the non-stop gabbing. I've been told she will learn how to speak, due to her non stop sounds she makes. She already says many words, but we are still working with her. Her signing skills are good, and ofcourse, a non-stop learning process with this. We believe in total communication anywhere's from ASL to miming. What ever it takes, we want to help her understand language. Our other continous factor is teaching her how to read. WE would love to hear how and what has worked good for others. Lindsey's hearing loss is 110 to 125 dcb loss in both ears. She was born with imperfect cochlears, no hair molacules, and so on. (Cochlear implants at this time, no, we're still not really interested..Besides, the child needs to be weraing their hearing aids consitantly, and Lindsey does not. She only has been wearing them at school and alot of times the teacher will find her with the aids turned off. It seems to be more of a nuisance then any support/help for her.) And that's fine. We feel and believe that the good Lord made her this way, and she has alot of gifts and talents and love to share with the world through her deafness. We don't believe in conforming to this world as the world would see it. (So, just to let those folks know before they write back to me saying stuff about this procedure. Politely saying, "We're not interested at this time.") She had a lazy eye at birth also. When we visited a Doctor about this, he had us take our daughter to a beach daily to walk on the rocks, in this fashion, it would help equalize her equilibrium. Guess what, it worked. When I tell other Doctor's about this, their totally amazed. Oh, how I love simple solutions. No drugs, no surgeries. YES! So, that is a good start. I am looking forward from chatting via e-mail with you. Sincerely, Lindsey's mama-Linda |
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