1 / 26

Social Emotional

Social Emotional. Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students: Navigating Complex Social Environments. Maine Educational Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Conrad Strack M.S. Ed. Public School Outreach Consultant Conrad.Strack@MECDHH.org. Goals.

mahsa
Download Presentation

Social Emotional

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Emotional Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students: Navigating Complex Social Environments Maine Educational Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Conrad Strack M.S. Ed. Public School Outreach Consultant Conrad.Strack@MECDHH.org

  2. Goals • Develop an understanding of the relationship that incidental learning and communication access has on social/emotional growth • Gather suggestions and ideas to help mitigate the extra challenges that Deaf and Hard of Hearing face in accessing incidental learning

  3. Topics • Importance of social/emotional growth • Social/emotional growth takes place where, how • How Deaf / Hard of Hearing needs differ from hearing classmates

  4. Topics • Deaf needs, Hard of Hearing needs • Encouraging social/emotional development • Opportunities available through MECDHH

  5. How important is social growth? • School success • College success • Work success • Relationship success

  6. How does social development happen? • Books? Classroom? • School hall, cafeteria, recess? • Friends? Family? • Social Media? • Communication?

  7. Communication • Formal classroom communication (teaching) • Informal/Incidental communication (between peers / classmates and at home)

  8. Deaf or Hard of Hearing needs differ from those of their hearing classmates? • Brief interactions with other students • Smaller vocabulary base especially pragmatic language due to missing incidental learning • Limited number of communication contacts • Communication often superficial in nature • Less access to social groups

  9. Differences continued • Use of a different language (ASL) • Not hearing or mishearing what was said • Using assistive technology that no one else in their class or family has – helps in class • Less exposure to TV, radio, music, etc. • Fewer friends

  10. Differences can lead to: • Frustration in dealing with hearing loss 24/7 • Anger at being different, struggling to understand what is said, missing information • Feeling embarrassed • Becoming extremely tired from working twice as hard to make sense of fragmented language

  11. Differences can lead to continued: • Not asking questions due to embarrassment, struggle or fatigue • Withdrawing because communication is a struggle • Isolation • Low self esteem • Emotional health

  12. Two types of learning • Effortful (Intentional) Learning • Learning that is consciously undertaken, with intention of retaining information for later use • Incidental (Unintentional) Learning • Acquisition of information without directed effort

  13. Incidental learning • Foundation for inferential learning and executive functioning • Incidental learning forms the neural and cognitive basis on which formal academic learning is built • The brain is designed to learn incidentally

  14. How does the social needs/opportunities of students who are deaf differ from those who are hard of hearing?

  15. Deaf social development • Has its own subculture in US and world • Has its own language – Pride • Has its own sports programs, community, events, social gatherings (all wonderful opportunities for informal social learning) • Students are visibly “different”

  16. Hard of Hearing social development • Same language as family • Hearing assume hard of hearing are the same as hearing • Limited positive role models • Language, socialization and incidental learning can be a struggle • Inconsistent access to pragmatic/social rules

  17. Encouraging communication with deaf and hard of hearing students • Small group work • Allow student to go to peers/classmates for help • Lunch buddies • Involvement in organized clubs, sports teams *** • Teach ASL as a class • Encourage all informal communication • Permit use of social media **

  18. Encouraging communication with deaf and hard of hearing students • Formally teach incidental learning • Explain to class how to include hard of hearing student • Encourage friends • Formally teach social skills/emotional skills • Push student out of comfort zone

  19. Encouraging Self-Esteem and Confidence • Belonging to a group, club, team • Having a unique skill • Develop advocacy skills • Encourage sense of worth • Feeling competent • develop hobbies • Encourage taking risks and challenges

  20. MECDHH Programs • W.I.S.E. • Kids Like Me (1st-5th grade) • Kids Like Me (6th-12th grade) • Participation in GBSD school sports activities • Special Events at GBSD • Student Awareness Programs • Social/Pragmatic language skills class

  21. How important is social/emotional development? • More important than academic ? • EQ > IQ

  22. Summary • Need for Social/Emotional growth • Importance of incidental learning • Providing access to incidental learning • Every student is different

  23. “Intellectual growth should commence at birth and cease only at death” • Albert Einstein

  24. Social/Emotional growth should commence at birth and cease only at death • Conrad Strack

  25. Resources • Self-Science:The Emotional Intelligence Curriculum, Karen McCown • Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman • Social Intelligence, Daniel Goleman • Executive Functioning in Education: From Theory to Practice, Linda Meltzer • Building Emotional Intelligence: Techniques to Cultivate Inner Strength in Children, Linda Lantieri, Daniel Goldman • Family Learning Day, Amy Szarkowski, BCH, June 21 • Successforkidswithhearingloss.com

  26. Those that know………….. Do • Those that understand …….Teach • Aristotle

More Related