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         Deafblindness:     more books (56)
  1. Evaluation and Educational Programming of Students With Deafblindness and Severe Disabilities: Sensorimotor Stage by Carroll J. Jones, 2001-09
  2. Blindness, Visual Impairment, Deaf-Blindness: Annotated Listing of the Literature, 1953-75 by Mary Kinsey Bauman, 1976-12
  3. Deaf-Blindness: national organizations and resources by Unknown, 1993-01-01
  4. Profiles: Individuals with deaf-blindness by Lisa E Edwards, 1994
  5. New Frontiers for Research on Deaf-Blindness by Herbert Rusalem, 1966
  6. Styles of Thinking / Multicultural Practices / Attitudes About Educational and Related Service Provision for Students With Deaf-Blindness and Multiple Disabilities (Exceptional Children, Volume 63, Number 3, Spring 1997)
  7. Early intervention for infants with deaf-blindness.: An article from: Exceptional Children by Martha G. Michael, Peter V. Paul, 1990-12-01
  8. The use of accommodations among students with deafblindness in large-scale assessment systems.: An article from: Journal of Disability Policy Studies by Leah S. Horvath, Stephanie Kampfer-Bohach, et all 2005-12-22
  9. Deafblindness
  10. Bibliographie des Taubblindenwesens. Bibliography on Deaf-Blindness. In German and English. Schriften zur Sonderpadagogik. Reihe B Originalarbeiten Heft 5. Armin Lowe and Benno Westermann. Dortmund 1969. 47 pages by Lowe & Westermann, 1969
  11. Etiologies and characteristics of deaf-blindness by Kathryn Wolff Heller, 1994
  12. Interagency collaboration for young adults with deaf-blindness: Toward a common transition goal by Jane M Everson, 1992
  13. Attitudes about educational and related service provision for students with deaf-blindness and multiple disabilities.: An article from: Exceptional Children by Michael F. Giangreco, Susan Edelman, et all 1997-03-22
  14. New Fortiers for Research on Deaf-Blindness by Herbert Rusalem, 1900

1. A-Z To Deafblindness
Understand more about deafblindness, and the people who live with it, includinginformation about how to communicate with a deafblind person.
http://www.deafblind.com/
A-Z to Deafblindness
[D]
Welcome to A-Z to Deafblindness
Please feel free to come in and browse around.
Information About Deafblindness. The Deafblind Manual Alphabet. [D] A Person with a Red and White Cane is a deafblind person. Some other Resources on the net for Blind or Deaf people. You can also read A-Z to Deafblindness in French, German, Italian, Portuguese or Spanish.
Go to AltaVista's Translator, and enter http://www.deafblind.com
I would like to take this opportunity to welcome you to A-Z to Deafblindness, and to thank you for visiting my modest and humble little Web Page. So come on in and make yourself at home, you will be made very welcome. My name is James Gallagher and I am deafblind myself. This site is here to try and offer some help to Blind or deaf people, and especially deafblind people, and those who provide specialised services for those who are deafblind. A-Z to Deafblindness is also here, to make people more aware about deafblindness.

2. A-Z To Deafblindness
Understand more about deafblindness, and the people who live with it, including information about how to communicate with a deafblind person.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. Information About Deafblindness
I would like to welcome you to this page of AZ to deafblindness, And thank you Now for the information which you have visited AZ to deafblindness for.
http://www.deafblind.com/info-db.html

Information About Deafblindness. [D] The Deafblind Manual Alphabet. Hello There, It's James here, I would like to welcome you to this page of A-Z to Deafblindness, And thank you for being interested in finding out more about us, A special welcome to fellow deafblind people, blind, and of course our deaf friends as well. By coming to this particular page you must be interested in learning how we, the deafblind, communicate with each other, and to our family and friends and to the hearing seeing world which we all live in. I sincerely hope that with the information which is below you will, at the end of this page, become more aware about deafblindness, and perhaps you may have learned how to communicate to a deafblind person, or a deaf person when you meet them. A little info about me, My name is James Gallagher, and I live in the United Kingdom. I am totally blind and almost profoundly deaf. I have to wear two powerful hearing aids which are linked up to a piece of equipment called a "hearit". This equipment which is worn around my neck and is placed on my chest, amplifies the hearing aids which then in turn allows me to hear a little. If someone wishes to speak to me they have to speak directly into the "hearit". This method is cumbersome for them and me, but not everyone knows the deafblind manual and without my hearing aids I am totally deaf.

4. Dobrodosli / Welcome @ Dodir's Homepage
About Croatian deafblind people, news, information about deafblindness and Usher syndrome, photo album. Croatian, English
http://www.dodir.hr
Posjetitelj / Visitor No:

5. A Deafblindness Web Resource
A deafblindness Web Resource. Welcome to A deafblindness Web Resource site. My name is James Gallagher and I am the owner of these pages.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. A Deafblindness Web Resource
Welcome to A deafblindness Web Resource site. My name is James Gallagher and I There is little information available on the network about deafblindness
http://www.deafblind.co.uk/
A Deafblindness Web Resource
Welcome to A Deafblindness Web Resource site. My name is James Gallagher and I am the owner of these pages.
What's New
Links on this page...
Terminology Internet Resources Videos about Deafblindness. Service providers ...
Terminology Deafblind, Deaf/Blind or Deaf-Blind?
Internet Resources relating to Deafblindness
There is little information available on the network about deafblindness compared to that available about deafness or blindness.. The largest source of information is the DEAFBLND mailing list, but a few other sites have useful information.
The DEAFBLND mailing list.
has put a lot of work in to make a WWW accessible archive of postings from the time that he joined the list. The official WWW accessible archives are now avialable at the hosting site, the Teaching Research Division of Western Oregon University going back to when Randy Klumph took over the list from Bob Moore. The revised announcement of the list describes how to join it, and what it covers, etc. There is now a copy of the DEAFBLND FAQ available for comment.

7. Sense - UK Deafblind Charity
Organisation for people who are deafblind or have associated disabilities.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. Deafblindness Bibliography - Unsorted
Contains three programs produced as part of a deafblindness If I hear there is nothing on deafblindness in here I will remove this one.......
http://www.deafblind.co.uk/biblio_unsorted.html
Deafblindness Bibliography - Unsorted
Thank you to : leslieg@fstr.wosc.osshe.edu Martha Lewis Randy Klumph klumphr@fstr.wosc.osshe.edu and others for the information here. This is currently full of duplicates and possibly errors. Please let me have any corrections you may have. Thank you
  • Title: ABLE STUDENT, ABLE TEACHER
  • Author: Kinney, Richard (Deaf-Blind)
  • Publication: (THE LION, March 1966, pg.8)
  • Date: 1966
  • Description: Brief sketch of Richard Kinney's life.
  • Title: ANECDOTES OF THE DEAF, DUMB AND BLIND
  • Author: Chambers Miscellany.
  • Publication: (CHAMBERS MISCELLANY, v.3, 1845, p. 32)
  • Date: 1845
  • Description: Tells about James Mitchell, a deaf-blind man.
  • Title: ART OF ADVERSITY
  • Author: Gardner, Raymond.
  • Publication: (NEW BEACON, v.LIV, no.636, April 1970, pp.89-90)
  • Date: 1970
  • Description: A biographical sketch of Ronald Scriven, a deaf-blind man.
  • Title: BECOMING A TEACHER
  • Author: Adamescu, Vasile (Deaf-Blind)
  • Date: 1991
  • Publication: (DEAF-BLIND EDUCATION, (January-June 1991):20-21)
  • Desctiption: Vasile Adamescu is deaf and blind. This has not stopped his ambitions, and he is now a teacher in the school for blind children in Clui, Romania.
  • Title: BEING DEAF-BLIND IS LIKE THIS
  • Author: Sculthorpe, Arthur (Deaf- Blind)

9. The Usher Syndrome Page
An in depth article by Mary Guest, Head of Usher Services at Sense, about Usher syndrome. Includes detailed description of what it is, the symptoms, genetics, transmission, the problems associated with it and what can be done.
http://www.deafblind.com/usher.html

Usher Syndrome
A Condition which affects Hearing and Sight. by Mary Guest, Head of Usher Services at Sense.
What is it ? Usher syndrome is an inherited condition which results in hearing loss and a progressive loss of vision from Retinitis pigmentosa (RP). The hearing loss is thought to be congenital, and ranges from moderate to profound. RP can occur without hearing loss. The condition is named after a British ophthalmologist, C.H. Usher, who in a paper in 1914 described several cases in which the link between congenital deafness and RP was stressed. However, as far back as 1860 workers such as von Graef and Liebreich in Berlin were aware of the link between congenital deafness and RP, especially in consanguinous marriages.
Retinitis Pigmentosa,
This term describes not one disease but a group of hereditary diseases of the retina. The retina is the light sensitive tissue inside the eye in which the first stages of 'seeing' take place. With RP the retina slowly degenerates and loses its ability to transmit pictures to the brain. In advanced stages characteristic clumps of pigment appear on the retina and can be seen through an ophthalmoscope.
Symptoms

10. Deafblind International Home Page
What is DbI? Management/Council What is deafblindness? Bibliographies DbI Members DbI Contacts DbI Review
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. DeafBlindInfo.org, Minnesota's Online DeafBlind Resource
Information on dual sensory loss of all kinds. Resource listings for Minnesota, the USA, and the world. Includes specialized consumer resource guides
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

12. DeafBlindInfo.org | Publications | FAQ
deafblindness is a combination of vision loss and hearing loss that prevents For individuals of all ages, deafblindness is a unique experience separate
http://www.deafblindinfo.org/FAQ.asp

13. Sense Scotland - The Helen Keller International Award
The Helen Keller award is a biannual award presented to the artist with the best submission, in any medium on the subject of deafblindness.
http://www.sensescotland.org.uk/helenkeller
Skip to content Search this site:
  • Home About Us What we do Back to navigation
    The Helen Keller International Award
    Dr Helen Keller, the deafblind woman known worldwide for her inspirational life and work, visited Scotland in 1933 with her teacher Anne Sullivan to accept an honorary degree from the University of Glasgow. On this trip she established a trust fund to be applied in the interests of deafblind people. Sense Scotland became trustees of this fund in 1989, transforming it from an annual essay competition, into the Helen Keller Award, a multi-media art competition open to professional and non-professional artists. Now coordinated biannually, the Award attracts an ever-increasing number of entries from artists across the world. The competition brief has always been a broad one - all work submitted should challenge perceptions of deafblindness. This is interpreted in many different ways, eliciting a diverse array of artwork in a broad range of media. It also includes the submission of work by artists who are deafblind themselves. The competition is unique in that the identity of artists remains undisclosed until after judging is complete - work is judged solely on its artistic merit.

14. Deafblind Children
Information and support for parents of deafblind children.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

15. A Deafblindness Web Resource
Internet Resources relating to deafblindness. a copy of the DEAFBLND FAQ AZ to deafblindness An excellent UK site by James Gallagher, who is deafblind.
http://www.eng.dmu.ac.uk/~hgs/deafblind/
A Deafblindness Web Resource
This site has closed down
This page will now be at http://www.deafblind.co.uk/index.html The remaining text will disappear as I find homes for it on the rest of my site.
This page is not an official page of the hosting site, and is in no way endorsed by them. The information here is provided in good faith, but no liability will be accepted for loss or damage resulting from its use, by the author of this page or the hosting organisation. Corrections to inaccurate or obsolete information, and new items, are welcomed; please send them to Hugh Sasse . Thank you.
Internet Resources relating to Deafblindness
a copy of the DEAFBLND FAQ A-Z to Deafblindness
An excellent UK site by James Gallagher, who is deafblind.
Windows Access
Windows tips for users with Low Vision Has gone (12-JUN-2001) Access to Windows 95 for people with Low Vision: An Overview Has gone (12-JUN-2001)
From The American Foundation for the Blind
Microsoft's Accessibility Support Page Microsoft Product Documentation in Accessible Formats Has gone (12-JUN-2001)
contains downloadable .EXE files which unpack into documents, and references to other sources.

16. See/Hear Newsletters Index
Free newsletter for families and professionals on visual impairments and deafblindness. Articles on an array of topics, with extensive archives. English, Spanish
http://www.tsbvi.edu/Outreach/seehear/index.htm
Home Site TOC Site Search Outreach
SEE/HEAR
A Quarterly Newsletter For Families And Professionals On Visual Impairments And Deafblindness.
A collaborative effort of the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired and Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services, Division for Blind Services Be notified by email when this page changes
it's private
. Powered by ChangeDetection Sign up to receive paper copy quarterly.
Publication Information

Deadlines for Submissions
... Summer 2005 in large print FAMILY PROGRAMMING CLASSIFIED

17. Deafblind UK - Welcome
National charity providing support services to, and campaigning on behalf of, deafblind adults and their carers. Includes information about the
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

18. Deafblindness
deafblindness is a unique disability; it has its own concepts and Familyoriented,stories of other children with deafblindness, and links to various
http://www.pacifier.com/~mstephe/irddb.htm
DEAFBLINDNESS
COMBINED HEARING AND VISUAL IMPAIRMENTS IN THE PEROXISOMAL BIOGENESIS DISORDERS One of the major effects of infantile Refsum Disease (as well as the other peroxisomal biogenesis disorders) is the combination of significant audiory and visual impairments. These sensory losses vary in severity from child to child, and these diseases do not necessarily lead to total deafness and/or total blindness. In fact, it is entirely possible that the child will retain some useful vision and hearing. However, in combination, these impairments of the distal senses cause serious developmental delay in the child; affecting cogntive and social development, orientation and mobility, and the acquistion of communication and language. The disabling condition caused by combined hearing and visual losses is deafblindness (or deaf-blindness, equally correct). A deafblind child cannot be thought of as blind and also deaf, nor as deaf and also blind. She is deafblind. Deafblindness is a unique disability; it has its own concepts and terminology, its own methods of assessment and education, and its own modes of communication which distinguish it from blindness and deafness understood separately. It is not a medical concept, the ophthalmologist and the audiologist observe within their respective spheres, and the strictly medical literature never refers to deafblindness. It's a developmental concept, and without it the nature of the disability cannot be understood.

19. Australian DeafBlind Council
Information on Usher's syndrome. Membership includes people with deafblindness, family, carers, support workers, professionals and service organisations.
http://home.connexus.net.au/~dba/
Welcome to the home page of the Australian DeafBlind Council
PO Box 1213
Camberwell Victoria Australia 3124
Telephone: Voice (03) 9439-2570
Fax (03) 9486 2092 ( +61 39 486 2092)
Email: Australian DeafBlind Council
At This Site
Introduction to Australian DeafBlind Council
Deafblind Interpreting Guidelines: Download Word 97 version
Papers from the National Australian Deafblindness Conference 2000
Australian Contacts
Internet and Overseas Contacts
Resource Papers
How to Join the Australian DeafBlind Council Australian DeafBlind Council Committee Members International Deafblindness information "Beacon" newsletters What is Usher Syndrome? Deafblind Interpreting Guidelines Information on Usher syndrome for parents Publications Usher Syndrome Information Kit The Deaf-Blind Association - Victoria Two-handed Manual Alphabet Deafblind Manual Alphabet
Site Visitors.
Page updated 24-1-03

20. Welcome To Deafblind Scotland Website
About us What's new deafblindness Support Us Information. Text version Parliament debate deafblindness 9th March 2005 PDF, Video
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

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