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What is Preschool/Early Childhood Education

Cases on Teacher Preparation in Deaf Education
Typically defined in the United States as the school program provided before Kindergarten and usually for children ages 3 and 4, although some schools include Kindergarten in preschool. Pedagogy and standards for preschool focus on preacademic skills in preparation for the academic work of elementary and include developmentally appropriate activities that have a heavy emphasis on language development. 1 This chapter uses the lowercase “deaf” to refer students, schools, and programs for those who have the audiological condition of not hearing and the uppercase “Deaf” to refer to students, adults, and organizations who share both ASL as a common language and the associated culture (see Padden & Humphries, 1988, as cited in National Association of the Deaf, n.d. ).
Published in Chapter:
Differing Opinions for One Student: Dual Modality Collaborations
Michelle T. Tanner (Utah Schools for the Deaf and Blind, USA) and Nathan E. Harrison (Utah Schools for the Deaf and Blind, USA)
Copyright: © 2023 |Pages: 15
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-5834-1.ch002
Abstract
The Utah Schools for the Deaf and Blind has sought to create collaboration between the traditionally opposing language philosophies of ASL/English and Listening and Spoken Language through partnering teachers together to educate students whose families want instruction in both modalities, but not simultaneous instruction in both languages. This collaboration was tested in preschool/early childhood grades and brought opposing viewpoints together and partnerships were not always successful. Through this process of collaboration, teachers learned a great deal about how to professionally work with people who may believe very different things when working toward the common goal of student success. Lessons from the struggles and successes of the collaboration are shared in the story of a Deaf teacher, Natalie, and the teachers she partnered with.
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