Showing posts with label Speech Impaired. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Speech Impaired. Show all posts

How To Teach A Deaf Baby Sign Language

WATCH [CC] - Learn Ways and How to Do Things - How to Teach a Deaf Baby Sign Language.


Ways and How sharing the video to educate hearing parents with Deaf babies and toddlers - For parents with normal hearing, communicating with a Deaf child can be a challenge. Babies normally learn their language by listening to their caregiver’s speech and recreating the sounds. Obviously, limitations in hearing ability prevent Deaf babies from acquiring language skills through this method. Here’s how to teach a Deaf baby sign language.


http://waysandhow.com/?p=24904 - waysandhow, diy, diy video, how-to.

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Related:
Educate For Hearing Parents With Deaf Childrens/Toddlers
Importance of Educating Hearing Parents
Interview With Hearing Parents Of A Deaf Son
ASL Rose: Two Deaf Babies

Related of Hearing Parents With Deaf Children:
Interview With Hearing Parents Of A Deaf Son
Educate Hearing Parents of Deaf Children
Early Language Acquisition of Deaf Babies
Deaf Awareness: One Deaf Child
American Sign Language For Babies & Toddlers
Cochlear Implants Is NOT A Cure !
Why Is It Important To Learn Sign At Birth For Deaf Child ?
Educating Hearing People About The Deaf World

Deaf and Disabled Telecommunications: California

WATCH [CC] - Deaf and Disabled Telecommunications Program: Equipment & Services for Individuals with a Speech Disability.


This archived webinar introduces participants to the free equipment and services available to disabled Californians through the Deaf and Disabled Telecommunications Program (DDTP),

• The California Telephone Access Program (CTAP), AKA California Phones, and
• The California Relay Service (CRS) with a focus on consumers with a speech disability.

Video from Ability Tools

Learn how you can assist your speech-disabled clients to receive free phones that accommodate their needs and how to use operator-assisted relay services that allow them to have conversations over the phone even if most other people have difficulties understanding their speech.

Love Miller is an Outreach Specialist for the California Telephone Access Program, specializing in consumers with speech difficulties.

Love provides outreach and information for people with speech difficulties through presentations and informational booths. She earned her BSW from San Jose State University and her MPA from National University.

CRTC Approves Video Relay Service In Canada

CRTC announces the Deaf and Hard of Hearing people across Canada will have access to new video relay service.


OTTAWA, Ontario -- The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC announced on April 22, 2014, that video relay services (VRS) will now be available in Canada for Deaf people who communicate in American Sign Language ASL and Langue des signes québécoise LSQ.

Video relay services enable callers to use the services of a sign language interpreter through the Internet. The interpreter interprets spoken English into sign for the deaf caller, and voices into English the signs of the Deaf caller.


“Many Canadians who are Deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired learn American Sign Language or Langue des signes québécoise early in life," Peter Menzies, Vice-Chairman of Telecommunications, and Chairman of the hearing panel.

"In many cases, neither English nor French is their first language. Video relay service will make it possible for them to communicate in sign language with ease, whether it’s to make a doctor’s appointment, speak to a friend or make any other type of call. At the same time, we are taking the necessary steps to ensure that this service is introduced in an efficient manner and as quickly as possible.”

Users will require their own high-speed Internet service and a device connected to the Internet such as a smartphone, tablet, computer, or videophone. Additional services such as call display and voicemail will be billed at rates similar to those charged by other service providers.

An independent administrator will be created to supervise the implementation and provision of video relay services and ensure that the views of users are taken into account during the decision-making process. The CRTC will review the video relay service three years after it has been launched to determine whether the service is efficiently meeting the needs of Canadians.

The CRTC is requiring that VRS become available to Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing or speech impaired as early as the fall of 2015. The VRS service is offered at no charge, but users must sign up to use it. People who want to use the service can use their own phone number to access VRS. An estimated 20,000 Canadians will be the primary users of VRS... Read More.

Chris Kenopic Vlog On CRTC VRS Announcement:


"CRTC announces that Deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired people across Canada will have access to new telecommunications services in 2015! Chris Kenopic, president and CEO of the Canadian Hearing Society, delivers a vlog on VRS in Canada."

What If... The Quest for VRS in Canada:


"The BCVRS Committee has co-produced a short documentary-drama film with Lenois Productions. It speaks directly to the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunication Commissioners about the reality of TTY vs. VRS in the Deaf community of Canada."

Funding to support video relay service in Canada will be taken from the National Contribution Fund, and will be capped at CAD 30 million annually. To ensure the perspectives of users are reflected in the decision making process, an independent administrator will be created to oversee the implementation and provision of video relay service... Read More.

Related Canada VRS:
CRTC Launches Canada Video Relay Service
CRTC Approves Video Relay Service In Canada
Deaf Canadians Launches VRS Petition
Deaf Canadians Put Pressure On CRTC
Canada VRS Rally

Related Video Relay Service:
Exclusive Interview Ed Bosson 'Father of VRS'
Video Relay Service For Deaf - Phone Sex Scene
Fapping Guy Calls Deaf Video Service 4,000 Times

Related Posts: #VideoRelayService

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