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If so, could you give me detailed information about it ?

2007-08-09 04:01:25 · 11 answers · asked by Mariocel 2 in Education & Reference Special Education

11 answers

I'm spanish...I think it's difficult and if you want to do it you're going to work very hard but........everyting is possible!!

2007-08-09 04:06:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Of course you can. Why would being blind keep a Spanish speaker from learning English? I don't know how to teach a foreign language, but I'm quite sure a foreign language teacher would not have a problem dealing with blind students. You can really talk and listen to a lot of language, even with your eyes closed!

2007-08-16 14:32:34 · answer #2 · answered by treebird 6 · 0 0

I am an LSA and a few years ago, I had a student who was Kurdish (native language Iraqui)He is blind. In 2 years he not only learned to speak English but also learned to read English Braille. He was 14 when he first came to this country.
He is now taking an A level in Braille.
I'm not saying it's easy but it is possible. It depends on the attitude of the student and the willpower of the teacher. It can be done but not as an easy ride. Good luck.

2007-08-15 08:06:57 · answer #3 · answered by helen p 4 · 0 0

Yes it is, but the teacher has to avoid visual teaching methods - which is more difficult than it seems. For example, a blind person will know what a supermarket is by sound and smell, so the reinforcement would involve sound and smell teaching rather than pictures. Teaching in this way is also more effective for sighted people!

2007-08-09 04:11:33 · answer #4 · answered by Always Hopeful 6 · 2 0

particular, it somewhat is a threat to chat English fluently in case you're no longer a close-by English speaker. particular, is it a threat to coach English as a non-interior reach English speaker. Many eastern ESL newcomers can talk fairly fluently after gaining knowledge of English verbal substitute in an eikaiwa (inner maximum English verbal substitute college) for countless years. They spend fairly some time for the duration of the week analyzing conversational English over countless years. For a Brazilian whose interior reach language is Portuguese i'd say you have an less demanding highway previous to you with the aid of fact your interior reach language makes use of the comparable alphabet and has comparable sounds. you should be waiting to chat extra fluently and do it lots till now a eastern ESL learner. concentration on chatting with a close-by speaker usually (4 hours a week or extra) so as which you would be able to %. up the nuances like organic pauses, observe rigidity, intonations, and purely undeniable previous pronunciations. watching American video clips with fairly some verbal substitute would not help as much as chatting with a close-by English speaker because you desire comments. right here in Japan, the craze is moving in the direction of hiring non-interior reach ESL instructors to coach English and this style is becoming without delay. So whether you're no longer a ideal speaker, there's a reliable possibility of having employed as a instructor right here in Japan as long as you're no longer eastern. additionally on your advice the TOEIC try in Japan would be moving in the direction of having international accents in the recordings so as that scholars can hear accents from international. this implies that threat opens up for you in a huge way. i wish this supply you some advantageous perception in the thank you to attain your desires. appropriate Regards, Prodigy author

2016-10-09 16:08:42 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Of course it's possible. Blind people are not stupid!
However, it will take a special ESL teacher, who can relate to the special needs these people have.

2007-08-09 04:07:22 · answer #6 · answered by Hi y´all ! 6 · 1 0

Absolutely. Not to be able to see does not affect the ability to learn. You need a different approach (audio materials, braille in spanisch and english).

Best
Pemma

2007-08-13 07:03:28 · answer #7 · answered by pbmnmark 2 · 0 0

Blind does not mean deaf or stupid. They can learn fine, you just don't get to use flash cards. With a good ESL teacher, they will learn fine.

2007-08-12 11:14:21 · answer #8 · answered by butmom26 2 · 0 0

you can teach them anyway you wanted providing you have someone who can speak fluent english and spanish. you can teach them reading as you can get brailie text which is like dots on paper.

hope i helped, sorry if i didnt

2007-08-12 04:46:07 · answer #9 · answered by reok 2 · 0 0

yes it is possible because if a person who can see can learn speaking english a blind person can also learn english speaking but there is not difficulty in speaking there is difficulity in reading english, if u r capble u can easily teach him. and its possible in adults .

2007-08-09 13:53:33 · answer #10 · answered by immi khan 1 · 0 0

you woud need a teacher that is fluent in both spanish and english but it may be harder however there sight shouldnt affect there ability to learn.

2007-08-09 04:13:14 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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