The impact of a unique cooperative American university USAID funded speech-language pathologist, audiologist, and deaf educator B.S. degree program in the Gaza Strip
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The impact of a unique cooperative American university USAID funded speech-language pathologist, audiologist, and deaf educator B.S. degree program in the Gaza Strip
(Mellen studies in education, v. 67)
E. Mellen Press, 2002
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [149]-150) and index
HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy022/2001052157.html Information=Table of contents
Contents of Works
- Machine generated contents note: Chapter 1. The Need
- Chapter 2. The Plan9
- Chapter 3. The Students25
- Chapter 4. Implementation41
- Chapter 5. Impacts on Students55
- Chapter 6. Impacts on Communicatively Handicapped Persons and Their Families65
- Chapter 7. Impacts on Participating Faculty and Institutions71
- Chapter 8. Implications for Training Rehabilitation and Special
- Education Professionals in Developing Countries79
- Chapter 9. Do's and Don'ts for Planning Similar Projects89
- Chapter 10. Research Implications: Questions Answered and Awaiting Answers 97
- Appendix A. Project Participants105
- Appendix B. Curriculum : 107
- Appendix C. Notes on Teaching in Gaza- 1995121
- Appendix D. Welcome to Gaza Packet133
- Appendix E. "Letter of Agreement" Between SCH and Faculty139
- Appendix F. Citation for Dr. Hatem Abu-Ghazaleh's Honorary Degree141
- Appendix G. Participants' Anecdotes143
- Sources Cited149
- Index151
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study describes a degree training programme conducted by Lamar University and Marquette University in the Gaza Strip 1992-1996 and its impacts on participants and others. Faculty from both universities travelled to the Gaza Strip, lived there and taught courses in classrooms constructed for the purpose. A $10 million grant from USAID resulted in the creation of state-of-the-art facilities for providing clinical services to speech- and hearing-handicapped children and the training of 33 Palestinian men and women. It provides a model that could be used to develop programmes for training other kinds of professionals in developing countries, and it may also be of interest to scholars studying the impact of projects funded by USAID.
Table of Contents
Preface ix Foreword xi Chapter 1. The Need 1 Chapter 2. The Plan 9 Chapter 3. The Students 25 Chapter 4. Implementation 41 Chapter 5. Impacts on Students 55 Chapter 6. Impacts on Communicatively Handicapped Persons and Their Families 65 Chapter 7. Impacts on Participating Faculty and Institutions 71 Chapter 8. Implications for Training Rehabilitation and Special Education Professionals in Developing Countries 79 Chapter 9. Do's and Don'ts for Planning Similar Projects 89 Chapter 10. Research Implications: Questions Answered and Awaiting Answers 97 Appendix A. Project Participants 105 Appendix B. Curriculum 107 Appendix C. Notes on Teaching in Gaza - 1995 121 Appendix D. Welcome to Gaza Packet 133 Appendix E. "Letter of Agreement" Between SCH and Faculty 139 Appendix F. Citation for Dr. Hatem Abu-Ghazaleh's Honorary Degree 141 Appendix G. Participants' Anecdotes 143 Sources Cited 149 Index 151
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