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Over the past decade there has been a significant increase in
interest from educators and the general public about deafness,
special education, and the development of children with special
needs. The education of deaf children in the United States has been
seen as a remarkable success story around the world, even while it
continues to engender domestic debate.
In Educating Deaf Students: From Research to Practice, Marc
Marschark, Harry G. Lang, and John A. Albertini set aside the
politics, rhetoric, and confusion that often accompany discussions
of deaf education. Instead they offer an accessible evaluation of
the research literature on the needs and strengths of deaf children
and on the methods that have been used-successfully and
unsuccessfully-to teach both deaf and hearing children.
The authors lay out the common assumptions that have driven deaf
education for many years, revealing some of them to be based on
questionable methods, conclusions, or interpretations, while others
have been lost in the cacophony of alternative educational
philosophies. They accompany their historical consideration of how
this came to pass with an evaluation of the legal and social
conditions surrounding deaf education today.
By evaluating what we know, what we do not know, and what we
thought we knew about learning among deaf children, the authors
provide parents, teachers, and administrators valuable new insights
into educating deaf students and others with special needs.
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