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Bibliographic Details
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED235829
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Table of Contents:
  • Serving Deaf Students in Academic Libraries. Academic Libraries Communication Problems Hearing Impairments Library Instruction Library Services Library Skills Postsecondary Education Problems This transcript contains the text of a speech and five panel presentations on the problems of people with hearing impairments and the provision of academic library instruction to deaf students. Herbert W. Larson describes: methods for effectively communicating with the deaf; the use of signing, lip reading, and interpreters; colleges for the deaf; the difficulties of using telephone devices for the deaf (TDD's); and library services for the hearing impaired. Virginia Alleman describes the library instruction program for the relatively large deaf student population at Golden West Community College in Huntington Beach, California. The use of many different types of media in library instruction is advocated by Mary Jane Platou of the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania. Linda Karuth, librarian at the National Institute for the Deaf (NTID) located at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in Rochester, New York, discusses the importance of publicizing library services for the deaf and recommends that all librarians learn some signing. Susan Feinberg describes library and college support services for the hearing impaired at Pasadena City College in California. Finally, Burnelle Ray, of Gallaudet College in Washington, District of Columbia, focuses on the evaluation of student performance in library instruction and lists nine possible instructional problems in designing library instruction for the deaf. (ESR)