Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T23:10:43.865Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Education of Children with Hearing Disabilities in New Zealand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

Michael Parsons*
Affiliation:
Christchurch Teachers’ College, New Zealand

Extract

New Zealand is actually bigger in land size than Britain but has only three million people. Outside the main centres the population is spread thinly over a relatively large area. The largest city is Auckland (Population close to 1 million people), my own city, Christchurch, has only 300,000 people. The problem in deaf education is fundamentally one of ensuring that every child, regardless of geographical location, is provided with the best possible help in all areas of development. This article represents my interpretation of how we attempted this in the past, what we are doing at the moment and what we might develop in the future.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Australian Association of Special Education 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, F., The Education of the Deaf in New Zealand, Unpublished thesis for M.A. University of Canterbury, 1945.Google Scholar
Allen, A. B., They hear with the eye; a centennial history of the summer school for deaf children. Wellington: School Publication Branch, Dept. of Ed., 1980.Google Scholar
Ciani, S., A portable hearing test program for the public schools. Language, Speech and Hearing Services to Schools, 1980, 2.Google Scholar
Dale, D. M. C., Deaf children at home and at school.Uni. London Press, 1967.Google Scholar
Dettre, J. H., Deliver me from research. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1980, 13.Google Scholar
Dowson, C., Radio hearing aids – an exploratory study. New Zealand Journal for Teachers of the Hearing Handicapped, 1980, 18.Google Scholar
Hodgson, K. W., The deaf and their problems. Watts: London, 1953.Google Scholar
Kretschmer, R., and Kretschmer, L., Language development and intervention with the hearing impaired. Baltimore: University Park Press, 1978.Google Scholar
Lock, A., The guided reinvention of language. London: Academic Press, 1980.Google Scholar
Lowenbraun, S., Appelman, K., Callahan, J., Teaching the hearing impaired. Columbus: Charles Merrill, 1980.Google Scholar
Markides, A., Best listening levels of hearing impaired children. Journal British Association of Teachers of the Deaf, 1980, 4.Google Scholar
Naiman, D., and Schein, J., For parents of deaf children. Maryland: National Association of the Deaf, 1978.Google Scholar
Parsons, M. B., Aspects of behavioural tests of hearing, parent guidance and education placement for children with impaired hearing. New Zealand Journal for Teachers of the Deaf, 1976.Google Scholar
Parsons, M. B., Communication – an attempt to examine the quality of our education for hearing impaired children. The Australian Teacher of the Deaf, 1977, 18.Google Scholar
Parsons, M. B., Approaches to the guidance of parents of young deaf children. In O’Rourke, B. and Clough, J. (Eds.), Early Childhood in New Zealand. Auckland: Heineman, 1978.Google Scholar
Plant, G. L., The use of textile supplements in the rehabilitation of the deafened: a case study. The Australian Journal of Audiology, 1979, 1.Google Scholar
Pollack, D., Educational audiology for the limited hearing infant. Springfield, Ill: Charles Thomas, 1970.Google Scholar
Schultz, M. C., An analysis of clinical behaviour in speech and hearing. N. J.: Prentice Hall, 1972.Google Scholar
Riesen, A., Studies of early sensory deprivation in animals. In Griffiths, C. (Ed.), Proceedings of international conference on auditory techniques. Illinois: Charles Thomas, 1974.Google Scholar
Tervoort, B., Development features of visual communication: a psycholinguistic analysis of deaf children’s growth in communicative competence. Amsterdam: North – Holland Publishing, 1975.Google Scholar
Vandenberg, D. M., The written language of deaf children. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research, 1971.Google Scholar
Warren, D., Blindness and spatial behaviour. In Griffiths, C. (Ed.), Proceedings of international conference on auditory techniques. Illinois: Charles Thomas, 1974.Google Scholar
Witheford, M. A., Wilton, K. M., and Parsons, M. B. Effects of residential school attendance on the social development of hearing-handicapped children. New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 1978, 13.Google Scholar