
Master of Deaf Education and Hearing Science
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Master’s Degree in Deaf Education and Hearing Science is a graduate level course of study designed for students with a background in education, communication disorders, or other related fields. The preferred career path is to obtain a bachelor’s degree in early childhood education, elementary education, deaf education/studies or communication disorders.
With your undergraduate preparation, you will enter the master’s program equipped to take previous learning and apply it in new ways to meet the special needs of children with hearing loss. Coursework includes extensive field experiences so that you can enter the field as a confident specialist in auditory-oral intervention.
Hands-on
learning opportunities are provided by our partner in this
program, Sunshine Cottage School for Deaf Children, the
region’s leading auditory-oral center. The school
focuses on the abilities of hearing-impaired children
rather than their disabilities, and includes a rich oral
language curriculum. With over 100 children with hearing
losses enrolled, the graduate student has many opportunities
to interact with the children, teach them and help them
manage their technology.
The Master of Deaf Education and Hearing Science is nationally certified by the Council on Education of the Deaf (CED). You will be able to receive CED certification upon graduation. You will also be able to apply for certification as a teacher of the hearing impaired in the state of Texas.
Program Objectives
The purpose of this program is to develop educators who
can teach children with hearing loss utilizing
auditory-oral and auditory-verbal methods (i.e. approaches
that do not utilize sign language). There are
only a few Master’s Degree programs in the United
States committed to the intensive training needed
to effectively use auditory-oral methods. Particularly
since hearing aids and surgical procedures are
bringing, more than ever, sound to children with
profound losses, the need is greater for well-educated
professionals, specialized in the techniques that promote
the development of listening, language and speech.
You will be prepared for placement in oral classes, centers
or schools for children with hearing loss. The
program is not designed to prepare graduate students
for placement in programs that use the various
forms of manual communication. One course
in
sign language is required, but proficiency is not
an objective; this class serves as an orientation
to alternate communication modes. Students completing
the course of study will be prepared to take the
ExCET/TeXes examination for teachers of the deaf
in the state of Texas, but not the ExCET/TeXes
test for sign language proficiency. During the
final semester, graduates will take Auditory-Verbal
Therapy, a
course designed to begin preparation for national
certification as an Auditory-Verbal Educator.
Through observations, demonstrations, lectures, group discussions,
research opportunities, assigned readings, and
practicum experiences, this program is designed
to educate graduate students in the joint Knowledge and
Skills statements from
the national Council
on Education of the Deaf (CED) and the Council
for Exceptional Children.
In addition to these national standards, the state of Texas expects teachers to demonstrate competencies in forty-four areas that have been identified as essential information and techniques for teachers in settings with hearing-impaired children.
Course of Study: Full- and Part-Time Options
The
MDEHS program can be completed through full time studies
(4 semesters) or through a part-time program (7 semesters)
to accommodate MDEHS students who are employed. The program
consists of 36 semester
credit hours of course work that
includes observations, seminars, demonstrations, research
opportunities, field trips, and practicum. Practicum assignments
are scheduled at Sunshine Cottage, the UTHSCSA, and partnership
schools and clinics in the San Antonio area. Students who
successfully complete the course requirements must pass
a comprehensive examination covering the major components
of the program. A thesis is not required; however, students
are required to acquire competency in reading and critically
reviewing professional and research literature, and to develop
awareness of statistical and research design concepts for
educational and clinical studies.
