Corporate News:
AzHearing.com
has new business hours
As part of our ongoing
commitment to serve you better, we have extended our
business hours. Our company hours are now from 8:00 a.m.
to 8:00 p.m. MST, seven days a week. Please call our toll
free number at 866-674-3549. An answering service
with courteous operators will be available to assist you.
Winners
of the June & July Prize Drawings
The prize
drawing winners for the months of June and July are Gloria
Montesclaros (San Antonio, TX) and Marco Anderson (Enid,
OK). Each will receive a bilingual pocket-size talking
calculator/alarm clock. Congratulations!
Interested in
participating in our prize drawings? Read box on your left
for details.
Feature
Article & Links:
Self-Knowledge
is Power - by Dr. Cheryl Davis
Self
determination is often thought of as the ability to advocate
for your needs. If you are self-determined, this means you
take responsibility for getting your needs met. You might
find that when you take the initiative to get your needs
met, your problem-solving and decision-making skills
increase and your stress is reduced. In the workforce or in
educational settings, this kind of proactive behavior can be
the key to success.
How
can you improve your self-determination skills and become a
better advocate for yourself? Learning these new behaviors
involves a four-step process. The first step involves
understanding: knowing yourself and recognizing your needs.
Next, you must be prepared. Think about the logistics of the
situation and determine what you will need. The third step
is to manage, to work to get what you need in place.
Finally, evaluate the success of your strategy. What worked
and why? What didn’t work, and why? Where did the plan
fall apart? What can you do differently next time to be
successful?
The
following are several tips to help you develop a better
sense of self determination.
-
Understand
your hearing loss.
This means knowing how your
hearing aids work, what a telecoil is used for, and how
to effectively use assistive listening equipment,
interpreters, or even hearing assistance dogs. It is not
enough to say that you want a particular accommodation.
You need to be able to state why you prefer one
accommodation to another, to describe why one
accommodation will meet your needs better than other
accommodations. In addition, be open to learning about
the pros and cons of each accommodation, and evaluate
each one in terms of the communication requirements of
the specific situation. Test yourself by describing this
to a friend, a child, an instructor, a disability
services provider, or an employer. How would you change
your description for each person?
-
Be
able to describe the impact of your hearing loss.
Many times students are
only able to communicate that they are deaf or hard of
hearing, or that they use (or don’t use) sign
language. This information alone, though, is not very
helpful to others who are trying to engage in
communication with you, or in trying to develop
appropriate accommodations.
Use
situation-specific examples. If you are talking to a new
dorm room partner, explain that you may not hear the
phone ring. Let your new roommate know that music played
late at night, for example, will not bother you. If you
are talking with a professor, let her know that you need
to see her face when she talks to you. Think about what
that person (e.g., friends, family, roommates, faculty,
disability staff) needs to know to interact with you
best in that situation.
-
What
are problem situations for you?
Identifying problems is the
first step in solving them. Start thinking about
different situations where you had problems
communicating, and others that went smoothly, situations
where you felt very comfortable and situations where you
felt very uncomfortable. Can you identify why one
interaction was successful and the other was not? You
may begin to notice a pattern (e.g., you have difficulty
communicating in noisy or group settings) that you will
now be able to address proactively.
-
Become
aware of the coping skills you use.
Don’t stop your self
evaluation with ‘I get by ok.’ We all use a variety
of coping skills to make it through various situations.
Sometimes we aren’t even aware of what we do unless
someone else points it out to us. Some coping skills
work well in some situations, and not so well in others.
Some worked well when we were younger, but are no longer
appropriate in a college setting or on the job. See if
you can identify behaviors you use in different
situations, and which ones serve you best. Work on
replacing behaviors that no longer serve you well with
new ones.
-
Identify
new skills.
Ask others what they do in
your situation. If you are the only student who is deaf
or hard of hearing on your campus, try joining an
internet group, such as Deaf-L or Beyond-Hearing to find
out what other people do. Find out about other resources
to help you accomplish your goals.
PEPNet
has many materials available that can help you in your self
discovery. Check out the PEPNet Resource Center http://prc.csun.edu
website under PEPNet products for information on a variety
of accommodations, and the pros and cons of each. There are
also Tip Sheets available that you can read for your own
understanding or that you can pass on to others to help them
to understand your needs. There are also several videos
available to help you in the decision making process about
attending college. College…Now What? Addresses the
questions students should be asking themselves about
choosing a postsecondary program. Pah! I’m in
College…Now What? Addresses the differences students will
face in receiving accommodations in college programs that
they may not have faced in their high school programs. Look
out World-Here I Come! Is the story of a young woman
describing her experiences in a mainstream college program
and how they differed from her previous residential school
background. These materials, and many more, can be found on
the PEPNet Resource Center website.
The
Northwest Outreach Center webpage also includes helpful
information on understanding the ins and outs of using
assistive listening devices (Demystifying Assistive
Listening Devices), and how to connect with others through
internet e-mail lists (Internet Resources Related to Hearing
Loss). These can be found at http://www.wou.edu/nwoc.
It is also a resource you can pass on to service providers
so that they can learn more about accommodations that might
be helpful to you.
Dr. Cheryl D.
Davis is the Coordinator for the Northwest Outreach Center (NWOC),
a division of the Regional Resource Center on Deafness at
Western Oregon University. NWOC
provides consultation, training, information, and resources to
insure that the access needs of deaf and hard-of-hearing
individuals are met in all postsecondary education and training
settings. Their web site features an extensive collection of
training materials, news & events, and a mailing list.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
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