Hearing & Loss
Explore interactive ear anatomy. Learn about conductive, sensorineural, and mixed hearing losses, and compare degrees of loss to everyday classroom noises.
Interactive Diagram Go to Module 1Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH) Classroom Training Dashboard
As an itinerant DHH teacher, I support classrooms like yours to ensure that acoustic access matches visual potential. By integrating small accommodations, checking technology daily, and planning seating dynamically, you empower your DHH students to thrive in their general education environment!
Traditional hearing aids do not restore normal hearing. In a noisy classroom, a student's brain works three times harder simply to parse speech from background racket.
Explore interactive ear anatomy. Learn about conductive, sensorineural, and mixed hearing losses, and compare degrees of loss to everyday classroom noises.
Interactive Diagram Go to Module 1Take a look at BTE aids, cochlear implants, BAHA, and school-wide sound field speakers. Understand how FM/DM transmitter mics send sound directly to receivers.
Device Catalog Go to Module 2Test desk placements on our drag-and-drop Classroom Planner. Assess ambient acoustics, check reverberation noise, and learn direct lesson delivery strategies.
Seating Snapper Go to Module 3Run through a step-by-step branching troubleshooting wizard. Learn battery colors, correct cleaning steps, moisture storage, and iPad pairing guides.
Branching Decision Tree Go to Module 4Our state-of-the-art simulator runs directly in your browser using the Web Audio API. Click and drag nodes on an audiogram plot to craft high-frequency sloping or cookie-bite losses. Blend in background HVAC buzz, add classroom echoing (reverberation), and instantly toggle simulation on/off during speech playback to experience what your student hears.
Web Audio API Go to SimulatorTick these boxes each morning as you sync classroom tech before the children arrive.
DHH students experience intense listening fatigue. Working double-time to lip-read and parse sounds results in mental exhaustion, causing them to drift or look away. Use a soft, non-invasive cue (e.g. saying their name, gentle shoulder touch) and use visual charts to break down assignments.
No, absolutely not! The Roger microphone automatically measures incoming speech volume and matches it, delivering a clean audio feed straight to the student's ears at a comfortable level. Shouting or talking directly into the microphone capsule causes cracking and highly distorted, loud sounds.
Passing the Roger transmitter pen is excellent, but if impractical during fast-moving group talk, always repeat the student's questions or comments! Example: "Sarah just asked if we need to do odd numbered math questions on page 42..." This ensures the DHH student hears what was asked.
Always **mute or turn off** the transmitter during side conversations with other staff, parent-teacher drop-ins, phone calls, or when stepping into the hallway or restroom! Otherwise, the student will hear your private audio clearly across structural classroom walls.