As part of its effort to bring more people who are deaf and hard of hearing into the STEM workforce, DeafTEC’s Project Good to Go works with California community colleges to provide resources for faculty who teach large numbers of military veterans.
“Hearing problems—including tinnitus, which is a ringing, buzzing, or other type of noise that originates in the head—are by far the most prevalent service-connected [disabilities] among American veterans,” according to the Office of Research and Development of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
The list of Top Ten Things Student Veterans Would like Faculty to Know was developed by DeafTEC, the Technological Education Center for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Students at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York, to raise educators’ awareness of the challenges student veterans face on college campuses and to share universal design for instruction practices that benefit veterans and other students.
2018 ATE Principal Investigators' Conference
by
Principal Investigators Encourage Faculty to Utilize ATE Program
by
From the Archive: Cybersecurity
by
SMART Future Project Builds on Previous ATE Grant
by
Video Presentations from the 2018 STEM For All Video Showcase
by
Contextualized Math Course Aims to Break Barriers to STEM Careers
by
From the Archive: Workforce Education at our Community Colleges: What Works?
by
ATE Impacts 2018-2019: 25 Years of Advancing Technician Education is Available
by
Brookings Report - Learning About Learning: Meaning Matters
by