Miscellaneous Section
Staying Connected –living with hearing loss, mine
or yours
In March 2016
West Oxford U3A organised a sell-out, highly successful, study
day on Living with Hearing Loss held in the Chakrabarti Lecture
Theatre at Oxford Brookes University. It was a ground breaking
venture in that it addressed a challenge, age-related deafness, that faces most
of our members, either directly or indirectly, yet was a subject that had
hitherto been ignored. It further utilised various ways of assisting
communication with those who have hearing loss in order that they continue to be
included in conversation and had the ability to understand each lecture.
West Oxford U3A has made available details on how to organise a
similar study day for other U3As to follow suit and these are listed
below.
- Locate a local venue that
has an induction loop system already installed.
These are not so easy to find so be prepared to investigate hiring a
portable loop to be placed around the perimeter of the hall. Health
and safety issues apply would apply though – people may trip over the
wires, so take precautions. Good places to look are educational
establishments, community centres, conference centres, hotels.
- Provide a British Sign
Language interpreter if you have profoundly deaf people
applying. These are extremely expensive so investigate if you have
one already amongst your membership and ask if they would offer their
services.
- Apply to the many charity
organisations for the deaf that exist and request sufficient copies of
their free information literature. Search on google for the
list. We used Action for Hearing Loss, Tinnitus, local Social
Workers for the deaf, National Association for Deaf people, Hearing Link,
Connevans (for list of products available to help deaf people).
There are many others, so apply to those specialising in the areas you
want to emphasise at your day.
- Estimate your budget based on the room
hire + speaker fees (+/or travel expenses) + administration costs (don’t
under-estimate these), lunches if the cost is to be inclusive then divide
by the number of seats available in your hall. This is the cost per
person to attend. Organise lunches, tea and coffee.
- Include partners of deaf
people within your flyer and application form. This is most important
because they are ones who are living with the effects of deafness too and
need support and tips on how to communicate.
- Try to break even on costs and apply to your
local area U3A network for possible financial backing. West Oxford
U3A committee funded the entire day themselves but Thames Valley
Network offered to cover any shortfall.
- Search for other donors towards running
costs. Not easy but maybe your speakers will not charge a fee so
that is a great contribution towards reducing running costs. This
was our situation and we gave all speakers a ‘thank you’ present
instead. Be prepared to pay travel expenses though.
- Speakers – we used a private
audiologist, but the NHS could also be approached, to talk about
age-related deafness, tinnitus and help available. A speaker from
Hearing Link to cover the emotional and social side and how they can
help. A social worker for the deaf. And
a very experienced teacher of adults in the skills of lip reading.
But you can tailor make your day to the areas in which YOU want to
concentrate.
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