What matters deafness of the ears, when the mind hears?

August 25, 2006

A1 for beating odds

Filed under: Education, General

A little belated, this article from our beloved tabloid "The Electric New Paper". Again, together, let’s say it everyone! Being HI is no barrier to academic excellence! a.k.a. I am deaf but I not stupid!

Now, hmm, here’s an idea for "I Not Stupid 3".

(Oh well, now I have an international audience, I would like to apologise for all the local Singaporean references which go right over non-natives’ heads.)
 

A1 for BEATING ODDS
Can’t hear? No problem
HE’S hearing impaired in both ears.

By Shree Ann Mathavan
12 February 2006

HE’S hearing impaired in both ears.

But for Elvin Koh Wei Chuan, that’s not an excuse, it’s an inspiration.

The 17-year-old from Gan Eng Seng School scored 10 points at the GCE O-level examinations.

Elvin, who lives in a four-room Delta Avenue flat, cannot hear at all without a hearing aid.

With it, he can make out what you say, if you talk loudly. Or he has to be close enough to lip-read.

He lost his hearing when he was in Primary 3.

‘Before that I had perfect hearing,’ he said.

‘One morning, I woke up and I could not hear well. Even the doctor could not tell me what happened.’

It wasn’t easy in class. He couldn’t pick up everything the teacher said.

But his form teacher, Mrs Tay Yen Ping, 32, did all she could to help.

He said: ‘Sometimes, I couldn’t hear very well in class, but Mrs Tay was very helpful, paying special attention to me.

‘She would try to speak louder and sometimes she would call me personally to let me know about the lesson.’

She also helped boost his self-esteem.

‘Sometimes, she would praise me in class about my results. This made me feel proud of myself and helped to build up my confidence.’

Despite his disability, the hardworking student has been a consistent performer, staying back in school for two to three hours before heading home to study some more.

His hard work paid off, with a result slip showing six A1s and two B3s.

He plans to go to a science faculty in junior college and eventually do research.

He hopes his example can help other hearing-impaired students.

‘I would like to tell them as long as they work hard and believe in themselves, they will be able to do as well as me, or even better.’

SUDDEN DEATH

His classmate, Abuzar Yakaram, 18, also had it tough.

His father, the sole breadwinner, died of a heart attack in February last year. He said he was close to his father and ‘it was a shock that it suddenly just happened’.

But thanks to the help of his teachers and friends, he was able to pull through and settle down to the demands of school life after a month.

‘My class helped me financially, and my close friends helped me by talking to me about it,’ he said.

The family now gets by with some help from relatives, as his mother, an asthma patient, does not work.

He is an only child.

His teacher also counselled him.

‘Mrs Tay has helped me by talking to me through the whole thing,’ he said.

She also collected about $1,000 for the family, from the teachers in school and his classmates.

Before his father’s death, Abuzar admitted he was not a very good student.

‘I used to be a borderline pass student. I was a very last minute person. I didn’t always do my work.

‘My father’s death motivated me to work harder. And especially after my prelim results, of 17 points, I decided it was time to buck up. I really studied.’

He scored two A1s, four A2s and two B3s. He hopes to go to Anglo-Chinese Junior College, as it is near his one-room Bukit Merah flat.

Speaking of his teacher he said: ‘She has always motivated us to become the best in whatever we do. She also likes to tell us about her life experiences to get us motivated.’

As for Mrs Tay, seeing her students achieve good results is her reward.

‘I feel very happy, generally my class did very well,’ she said.

Copyright © 2005 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn. No. 198402868E. All rights reserved.

Thanks for the comments!

Filed under: Announcement

Pathetically few they may be.

But what keeps me going is knowing that people use this site, as a source of information, to know more about deafness, and even for more prosaic reasons like, hey!, learning that baby signs really work. (What’s more, I myself am learning too.)

Which is all that matters to me - that I am helping in some way, however small, to do something potentially big.

:)
 

Baby sign language — gimmick or early voice?

Filed under: Education, General

A Reuters news article on the topic du jour - the YouTube link to signing babes is currently the most popular read on this site.

(Perhaps it’s due to ‘babes’ instead of ‘babies’? Heh heh.)

Nine-month-old Alexandra lets her mother know when she is hungry. Andrew, 11 months, makes it clear he wants some milk.

They may be too young to speak, but Alexandra and Andrew have joined the growing numbers of hearing babies who are learning sign language to tell their parents what they are thinking.

Read on…

Yo–I’m Deaf!

Filed under: General

Karen, "a deaf mom of three deaf and hard of hearing kiddos", sounds so positively perky and cheery in her epinions biography that I read the whole post through with a smile.

A smile, in part, of recognition and empathy. "Hey! It was EXACTLY like that for me too!!" 

I was born with normal hearing and I was diagnosed with a moderate to severe hearing loss when I was seven. This explains why my speech is close to normal– my hearing loss occurred after the acquisition of speech. I received my first hearing aid when I was nine, but I mostly got by on lip reading. Sound coming into the hearing aid wasn’t clear, which meant that I couldn’t use the phone and have an understandable conversation. 

Read on…

 

Check out her blog too…

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