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Heroes: Who do you look up to? Heroes: Who do you look up to?
Heroes: Who do you look up to?
$ 2
We all need heroes, the role models we look up to, the ones who help us get through hard times; the ones we aspire to be like. These worksheets will help students identify their heroes. "Real people ... or Super Heroes" pictures and discussion for young children; Hero Vocabulary Words, a list of descriptive words for all kinds of heroes; deaf/hard of hearing hero, Marcus Titus; a fictional hero, Augie Pullman from Wonder (by R. J. Palacio); a historical hero, Martin Luther king; a Hero Journal for students to add their own personal heroes
*BACK TO SCHOOL EDITION* "Ideal" vs. Difficult Listening Scenarios (Self-Advocacy Skills) *BACK TO SCHOOL EDITION* "Ideal" vs. Difficult Listening Scenarios (Self-Advocacy Skills)
*BACK TO SCHOOL EDITION* "Ideal" vs. Difficult Listening Scenarios (Self-Advocacy Skills)
By The Transforming TOD
sku: A29ADV1497
$ 375
This resource contains 15 possible listening situations for DHH learners. Read each scenario and have your student decide if this is an "ideal" listening situation or a "difficult" listening situation ...
Advocacy - Steps to SA Success Goal 7- Understanding Rights and Access Advocacy - Steps to SA Success Goal 7- Understanding Rights and Access
Advocacy - Steps to SA Success Goal 7- Understanding Rights and Access
$ 3
Use this worksheet with students to teach them about their civil rights and rights to access in the workplace, at college, and in the community. What accommodations do they feel they need to be fully ... engaged as a member of a community?
DHH Social Story:  When My Nose Runs DHH Social Story:  When My Nose Runs
DHH Social Story: When My Nose Runs
By Diversely Deaf
sku: A32SM1614
$ 450
Additional Comprehension ActivitiesReading Comprehension QuestionsLists of tier 1 + 2 related vocabGame board to make it fun or help that wiggly off-task child stay focusedNew Concept for Older Kids: ... What are “endonyms”This is a story to help children/students who wear hearing aids understand why they may go to the doctor and/or ENT more often than others. The story can be read for comprehension. It teaches new vocabulary and creates a wonderful language opportunity for students to better advocate for themselves at school, home, and the doctor/ENT office. This story was written with younger children and their families and older students who continue to come to school with blocked hearing aids and do not use an interpreter for language access.Service Activity for EI-ECSE Families & Home VisitsFor any family, this story can be an important conversation starter, or reminder, to understand the language impact of even partially clogged hearing aids for their kid(s) who are not using signs. This can be demonstrated to parents by using a listening tube when their child’s hearing aid is plugged in and cleaned, and then having them listen again to the difference in clarity of language coming through the hearing aid to their child’s brain.Story Printable OptionPrint each two-page spread in landscape mode OR - Print a two-page spread but cut apart pages to show 1 page at a time. Spiral bind, 3-hole punch, or staple.Interactive Digital OptionPresent the book on a device or overhead projector. To play the digital version of the game, click on the digital spinner link. Change the spinner to “3” numbers. Pick & move game pieces (pink, green, blue)QuestionsUse professional judgment when deciding on which comprehension questions to ask the student. *The advanced questions are marked with an * following the number.VocabularyTier 1 vocabulary Tier 2 vocabulary prefix Endonyms short nonfiction passage Endonym Activity Options ask students to research endonyms related to sick words show sick examples and ask them to find more

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