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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cusacke494 (talk | contribs) at 17:33, 18 April 2018 (homework for friday). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Article Evaluation Bold text PRIMARY SOURCES You need to have primary and secondary sources in your writing. It shows where you get the information primary sources can be biased and may twist historical views. I kinda feel like if the information was on something we were interested in it would be much easier- my opinion the people on the talk page are talking about how primary sources are like first had testimonies or direct evidence concerning a topic that is being investigated. They are also talking about what they deleted and added and how someone was trying to combine two sentences into one (which made it confusing so that's why they took it out)

Bold text Literature Review The people on the talk page are talking about how literature review and semantic review and survey article and meta-analysis should all be treated as a different account and that each definition may vary based on the topic you are studying everything looked pretty good on this page content wise and it had references and had three different sources living review, review journal and empirical study of literature.

homweork for wed the 18th

'different special education total communication for deaf children' Italic text add more to the talk page on how this is not used just for deaf children http://www.raisingdeafkids.org/communicating/choices/tc.php TC is a way of teaching children with hearing loss TC uses both hearing and seeing to communicate children may learn sign language gestures and body language to get ideas across Cued speech What happens in a TC program All TC programs are not the same:

In some TC programs, teachers and children always speak and sign at the same time. This is called simultaneous communication, or simcom. These programs encourage children to use the hearing they have left. These programs encourage children to talk and learn language. These programs usually follow a signing system based on English. In some TC programs, teachers emphasize learning language. Teachers may sign without speaking at the same time. Teachers may spend less time on using the hearing that is left and talking. These programs may use American Sign Language (ASL). ASL does not match spoken English.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page). TC helps children learn by giving them language Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).


Lead Section first draft Total Communication for deaf children is more than just teaching deaf children communication its focuses on teahing children stratiges to help them communicate better. some stratiges would be finger spelling , body language, sign language, lip reading and natural gestures to communicate. If a child is in a TC program typicaly they wear hearidng aids or implants to help them furthure. According to rasing deaf kids these types of programs encourage children to use the hearing they still have left. TC helps children learn by giving them language. The two things you need to know about TC is that not all programs are the same and its not only used to help deaf children communicate it also helps children who may have down syndrome and its also shown to help boys who have fragile X syndrome since usually they learn to speak late. Total Communication helps to prevent frustrations and behavior problems that sometime happen when children can't communicate effectivley. Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page). Heidi M. Feldman, Cheryl Messick, in developmental- Behavioral Pediatrics (fourth edition) 2009. the article is missing sources citations and just more overall infrmation on the toipc