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AI Tool Series #1: ChatGPT & AI Writing Assistants – The Skills That Will Make You Competitive

December 5, 2025

“I used to spend HOURS drafting one professional email, worried about grammar, tone, and whether I’d be taken seriously. Now? 5 minutes. But here’s what matters more: I’ve gotten THREE promotions since mastering AI writing tools. Let me show you the exact career advantages these give us.”


Why Written Communication = Career Power for Deaf Professionals 🎯

In modern workplaces, 60-80% of all professional communication is written: emails, Slack messages, project documentation, reports, proposals. While many hearing employees still rely heavily on phone calls and verbal meetings (which often exclude us), companies are increasingly valuing strong written communication skills.

Here’s our competitive advantage: We’ve been mastering written communication our entire lives. AI tools amplify this existing strength.


Specific Career Benefits for Deaf & Hard of Hearing Professionals

1. Eliminating the “English as a Second Language” Barrier

For many of us, ASL is our first language. AI writing assistants help us:

  • Match native English writing standards without years of additional study
  • Understand workplace jargon and idioms that don’t translate well from ASL
  • Write in different professional “registers” (casual Slack vs. formal client email)

Example: I used to avoid applying to senior positions because job descriptions used complex English I wasn’t confident understanding. Now I paste them into ChatGPT: “Explain this job description in simple terms and tell me what skills they’re really looking for.” I’ve applied to (and gotten) jobs I would have skipped before.

2. Competing for Remote Work Opportunities

Remote work is IDEAL for deaf professionals—but you need to stand out in written applications.

How AI helps you win remote jobs:

  • Craft compelling cover letters that address job requirements precisely
  • Write proposals that convert (freelance/contract work)
  • Communicate effectively across time zones (no phone tag needed)
  • Document your work clearly so your value is visible

Statistics matter: Remote jobs get 100+ applications. AI helps you write the ONE that gets read.

3. Thriving in Fields That Value Documentation

Certain careers are perfect for deaf professionals AND highly value written skills:

Tech & Software Development:

  • Write clear documentation (often required)
  • Communicate in GitHub, Jira, Slack
  • Explain technical concepts in writing
  • AI advantage: Use ChatGPT to understand code, write documentation, explain technical concepts to non-technical stakeholders

Project Management:

  • Create project plans and status reports
  • Document decisions and requirements
  • Coordinate teams via written channels
  • AI advantage: Generate meeting summaries, create project templates, draft stakeholder updates

Content Creation & Marketing:

  • Write blog posts, social media, newsletters
  • Create marketing copy
  • Develop content strategies
  • AI advantage: Overcome writer’s block, generate multiple content variations, optimize for different platforms

Data Analysis & Research:

  • Write clear analysis reports
  • Explain findings to stakeholders
  • Document methodologies
  • AI advantage: Transform raw data insights into compelling narratives, create executive summaries

Legal & Compliance:

  • Draft contracts and policies
  • Write case summaries
  • Create compliance documentation
  • AI advantage: Understand complex legal language, draft initial versions of documents

4. Navigating Workplace Communication Without Accommodation Delays

Real talk: Even with legally required accommodations, getting interpreters for every meeting, waiting for captions, or requesting transcripts takes time and energy.

AI gives you immediate access to:

  • Understanding written materials instantly (no waiting for simplified versions)
  • Drafting responses quickly (no communication lag)
  • Self-advocacy (write clearer accommodation requests)
  • Independence in learning (research new skills without relying on others)

5. Building Expertise That Companies Need

Here’s something most people don’t realize: Being skilled at AI tools is itself a marketable skill.

How to position yourself:

  • “I streamlined our team’s documentation process using AI tools, saving 10 hours/week”
  • “I trained team members on using AI for clearer communication”
  • “I developed AI-assisted workflows that improved our response time by 50%”

Career paths opening up:

  • AI implementation specialist
  • Accessibility + AI consultant
  • AI prompt engineer
  • Technical writer (AI-assisted documentation)
  • Content strategist (AI-enhanced creation)

Template/Sample: I added “AI-powered communication workflows” to my resume. In my last interview, I spent 15 minutes explaining how I use AI tools—and got offered 15% more than the posted salary because the company wanted those skills across their team.

6. Salary Negotiation & Self-Advocacy

This is HUGE and often overlooked.

Use AI to:

  • Research salary ranges for your role and location
  • Draft negotiation emails that are assertive but professional
  • Prepare responses to common pushback (“We can’t increase salary”)
  • Document your achievements in compelling language for performance reviews
  • Request accommodations clearly with legal backing if needed

Template: “I’m negotiating salary for [role]. Current offer is [X]. Market rate is [Y]. Draft a professional email that: 1) expresses enthusiasm, 2) presents data supporting higher salary, 3) maintains positive tone.”


Top AI Writing Tools to Master 📝

1. ChatGPT (Free + Paid)

🔗 https://chat.openai.com

Free version capabilities:

  • Unlimited text conversations
  • Draft emails, letters, reports
  • Learn new concepts
  • Explain complex topics
  • Translate professional jargon

Paid version ($20/month) adds:

  • Faster responses (important for work deadlines)
  • Access to GPT-4 (significantly better at complex tasks)
  • Internet browsing for current information
  • File uploads (analyze PDFs, spreadsheets)
  • Custom instructions (teach it your writing style)

Career-specific use cases:

  • Job hunting: “Review this resume for [job title]. Suggest improvements to match the job description: [paste description]”
  • Daily work: “Turn these meeting notes into a professional email update for my manager: [paste notes]”
  • Learning: “I need to learn [skill] for work. Create a 30-day learning plan with daily tasks”
  • Problem-solving: “I’m having an issue with [workplace situation]. Suggest 3 professional ways to address this”

My recommendation: Start with free version. Upgrade to paid if you’re job hunting or use it daily for work—it pays for itself quickly.

2. Grammarly (Free + Premium)

🔗 https://grammarly.com

Why this matters for deaf professionals: Grammar mistakes in professional communication can lead to unfair assumptions about your capabilities. Grammarly helps eliminate this bias.

Free version:

  • Real-time spelling and basic grammar
  • Tone detection
  • Works across email, Google Docs, LinkedIn

Premium ($12/month):

  • Advanced grammar and style suggestions
  • Vocabulary enhancement
  • Plagiarism detection (important for content creators)
  • Formality level adjustment

Career applications:

  • Client communication: Ensures your emails are error-free
  • LinkedIn: Polishes your profile and posts (professional presence matters)
  • Job applications: Catches errors that could disqualify you
  • Reports/documentation: Makes your work look polished and professional

Install the browser extension and it works everywhere you type—email, Slack, LinkedIn, web apps.

3. Claude (Free + Paid)

🔗 https://claude.ai

Unique advantages:

  • Handles longer conversations (great for complex career questions)
  • Can analyze uploaded documents (contracts, policies, long reports)
  • Better at nuanced advice and detailed explanations
  • More natural conversation style

Best career uses:

  • Contract review: “I received this employment contract. Explain the key terms and flag anything concerning: [upload PDF]”
  • Career guidance: “Based on this conversation about my skills and interests, suggest 5 career paths I should research”
  • Understanding policies: Upload employee handbook, ask specific questions
  • Research: “Compare these three job offers considering salary, benefits, growth, and work-life balance”

Sample use case: When I’m considering major career decisions, I use Claude for in-depth analysis. It remembers context better across long conversations.

4. Notion AI (Built into Notion)

🔗 https://notion.so

Best for: Organization + AI writing in one place

Career benefits:

  • Keep all job search materials in one place (resumes, cover letters, applications)
  • Use AI to generate/improve content directly in your workspace
  • Create templates for recurring tasks
  • Manage projects with AI assistance

Pricing: Notion is free; AI features are $8-10/month

How we use it:

  • Job application tracker with AI-generated follow-up emails
  • Personal knowledge base where I ask AI questions about stored information
  • Meeting notes with AI summaries
  • Career development journal with AI insights

5. Microsoft Copilot (Included with Microsoft 365)

🔗 Available in Word, Outlook, PowerPoint if you have Microsoft 365 subscription

If your workplace uses Microsoft:

  • Outlook: Draft emails, summarize threads
  • Word: Generate reports, improve writing
  • PowerPoint: Create presentations from outlines
  • Excel: Understand formulas, analyze data

Career advantage: If your company already pays for Microsoft 365, you might have this included—check your subscription. It’s incredibly powerful for workplace productivity.


Specific Prompts for Career Success 💼

Job Hunting Prompts

  1. Resume improvement:
   "I'm applying for [job title] at [company/industry]. Review my resume and suggest how to better highlight relevant experience. Here's the job description: [paste] Here's my resume: [paste]"
  1. Cover letter:
   "Write a cover letter for [position] that: 1) Shows genuine interest in [company], 2) Highlights my experience in [relevant skills], 3) Addresses why I'm changing careers from [old field] to [new field], 4) Maintains professional but warm tone. Keep it under 300 words."
  1. Interview preparation:
   "I have an interview for [role]. Generate 15 likely interview questions and strong answer frameworks. My background: [brief summary]"
  1. Thank-you email:
   "Draft a post-interview thank-you email that: 1) References specific conversation about [topic], 2) Reaffirms my interest, 3) Adds one point I forgot to mention about [relevant skill], 4) Keeps professional tone"

Workplace Communication Prompts

  1. Email to manager:
   "Convert these rough notes into a professional email for my manager: [paste notes]. Tone should be confident but respectful. Include a clear ask for [specific need]."
  1. Difficult conversation:
   "I need to address [workplace issue] with [colleague/manager]. Suggest how to phrase this professionally via email, focusing on solutions rather than blame."
  1. Project update:
   "Turn this project status into an executive summary email: [paste details]. Highlight wins, acknowledge challenges, present clear next steps. Max 200 words."
  1. Meeting summary:
   "Create a meeting summary from these notes: [paste]. Format: decisions made, action items with owners, open questions. Professional tone for team email."

Career Development Prompts

  1. Skill assessment:
   "Based on current job market trends in [industry], which of these skills should I prioritize learning: [list skills]? Explain which has best ROI for career growth."
  1. Performance review prep:
    "Help me document my achievements for my performance review. I did: [list accomplishments]. Frame these in terms of business impact with metrics where possible."
  1. Salary research:
    "What's the typical salary range for [job title] with [X years] experience in [location/industry]? What factors influence the higher end of that range?"
  1. Career transition:
    "I'm transitioning from [current field] to [target field]. What skills are transferable? What gaps should I fill? Suggest a 6-month transition plan."

Learning & Skill Development Prompts

  1. Understanding complex topics:
    "Explain [technical concept] like I'm transitioning into this field. Include: basic definition, why it matters, how it's used in real work, and 3 resources to learn more."
  1. Learning plan:
    "Create a 30-day plan to learn [skill] well enough to use it professionally. I can dedicate 1 hour daily. Include daily tasks, practice projects, and how to measure progress."
  1. Workplace jargon:
    "My team keeps using these terms: [list]. Explain each in simple language with examples of how they're used in workplace conversations."

Real Career Wins Using These Tools 💪

Landing my current remote position:

  • Used ChatGPT to tailor resume to job description (got interview)
  • Practiced answers to technical questions with AI (nailed interview)
  • Drafted follow-up email that referenced specific conversation points (stood out)
  • Result: Offered position with full remote flexibility

Getting promoted to senior role:

  • Used AI to document my achievements in compelling business language
  • Prepared case for promotion with data and examples
  • Drafted email requesting promotion meeting with clear value proposition
  • Result: Promoted 6 months earlier than typical timeline

Building freelance income:

  • Created client proposal template with AI that I personalize for each project
  • Use AI to draft initial content, then add my expertise
  • Respond to clients professionally within hours (looks highly responsive)
  • Result: Earning extra $2K/month freelancing, all remote text-based work

Negotiating better accommodations:

  • Researched ADA requirements using AI
  • Drafted formal accommodation request with legal backing
  • Prepared responses to potential pushback
  • Result: Got real-time captioning service approved when initially denied

Getting Started: Your 4-Week Action Plan ✅

Week 1: Foundation

  • Day 1-2: Sign up for ChatGPT (free). Spend 30 minutes just asking it questions about topics you’re curious about
  • Day 3-4: Install Grammarly browser extension. Let it run in the background as you write emails
  • Day 5-7: Practice these 3 prompts daily:
    • “Improve this email: [paste]”
    • “Explain [something work-related] simply”
    • “Help me draft [something you need to write]”

Week 2: Apply to Real Work

  • Choose ONE work task: Could be writing a report, responding to a difficult email, preparing for a meeting
  • Use AI to complete it: Draft with ChatGPT, polish with Grammarly
  • Track time saved: How long did this task usually take? How long with AI?
  • Repeat daily: One real work task per day

Week 3: Build Your Prompt Library

  • Create a document: Save prompts that work well for you
  • Categories: Job hunting, daily work, learning, problem-solving
  • Customize: Modify standard prompts to fit your role/industry
  • Test variations: Try different phrasings to see what gets best results

Week 4: Advanced Techniques

  • Try Claude: For complex documents or career advice
  • Experiment with tone: Ask AI to make something “more confident” or “more diplomatic”
  • Combine tools: Use ChatGPT for drafting + Grammarly for polishing
  • Measure impact: What has improved? Time saved? Quality? Confidence?

After Week 4: Decide if paid versions are worth it based on your usage. If you’re using AI tools daily for work or job hunting, paid versions usually pay for themselves.


Pro Tips From 2+ Years Using These Tools 🔥

DO:

✅ Always review and personalize AI output

  • AI gives you 80% of the way there—add your voice, experiences, and specifics
  • Example: AI drafts email, you add personal anecdote or specific project reference

✅ Teach AI your communication style

  • In ChatGPT paid version, use “Custom Instructions” to set preferences
  • “I’m a deaf professional. Keep language clear and direct. Avoid idioms I might not know.”

✅ Use AI to check your own writing

  • Paste your draft: “Is this clear? Any grammar issues? How’s the tone?”
  • Helps you learn what strong writing looks like

✅ Ask for multiple options

  • “Give me 3 versions of this email: casual, professional, and formal”
  • Choose the one that fits best, or mix elements from each

✅ Use AI for cultural translation

  • “Is this phrase appropriate for professional American business communication?”
  • Helpful for understanding workplace culture nuances

DON’T:

❌ Share confidential company information

  • Don’t paste client names, proprietary data, or sensitive information
  • Rephrase to be generic: “a client in the healthcare industry” instead of specific names

❌ Copy-paste without reading

  • AI makes mistakes—factual errors, wrong tone, outdated information
  • You’re responsible for anything sent under your name

❌ Rely 100% on AI for major career decisions

  • Use AI for information and drafting, but make final decisions yourself
  • Combine AI insights with advice from mentors, career counselors, deaf professionals in your field

❌ Let AI replace your unique perspective

  • Your lived experience as a deaf professional is valuable
  • Use AI to communicate your ideas clearly—not to replace your ideas

❌ Ignore learning opportunities

  • When AI corrects your grammar, understand WHY
  • This helps you improve your writing skills long-term

Free Resources to Go Deeper 📚

Learning AI Tools:

  • Learn Prompting: https://learnprompting.org – Free course on prompt engineering
  • OpenAI Prompt Guide: https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides/prompt-engineering
  • Grammarly Blog: https://www.grammarly.com/blog/ – Writing tips that work with or without AI

Career Resources for Deaf Professionals:

  • National Deaf Center on Postsecondary Outcomes: Resources on career development
  • RIT’s Career Development Center: Deaf/HoH-specific career guidance
  • Deaf Professional Network (LinkedIn): Connect with other deaf professionals

Save this prompt library: (I’ll create a free Google Doc with 50+ career-focused prompts—drop a comment if you want the link!)


The Bottom Line 💯

AI writing tools haven’t just made my work easier—they’ve fundamentally changed what’s possible in my career.

Before AI tools:

  • Applied to 30 jobs → 2 interviews → 0 offers
  • Spent 3+ hours on important emails, still worried about mistakes
  • Avoided roles that required “excellent written communication”
  • Felt at a disadvantage competing with native English speakers

After mastering AI tools:

  • Applied to 15 jobs → 8 interviews → 3 offers (chose the best one)
  • Draft most emails in under 10 minutes with full confidence
  • Actively seek roles emphasizing written communication (my strength!)
  • Get compliments on my “clear, professional communication style”

This isn’t about AI doing the work for you. It’s about AI amplifying your existing strengths, removing barriers that shouldn’t exist, and letting you compete on your actual capabilities.

Your skills + AI tools = Career opportunities that were out of reach before


Next in this series: AI Video Editing & Auto-Captioning – Building your professional brand visually (coming soon!)

#DeafProfessionals #AITools #DeafCareers #ChatGPT #CareerDevelopment #DeafCommunity #RemoteWork #ProfessionalDevelopment #DeafSuccess #AccessibleTechnology #CareerGrowth #DeafAtWork

https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/AI-Tool-Series-1.png 900 900 geelearn https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hearosLogoRound.png geelearn2025-12-05 07:49:002025-12-06 02:41:40AI Tool Series #1: ChatGPT & AI Writing Assistants – The Skills That Will Make You Competitive

“Your Deaf Child Is Waiting for YOU to Meet Them Where They Are 💙”

November 29, 2025

💔 “My child and I can’t communicate…”

This breaks my heart every time I hear it. But here’s the good news: connection doesn’t require perfect signing. It requires EFFORT.

🏠 5 tips to connect with your deaf child TODAY:

1️⃣ GET ON THEIR LEVEL (literally) Sit, kneel, or get down to their eye level. Face-to-face communication is EVERYTHING. Your child needs to see your face, expressions, and hands.

2️⃣ MAKE YOUR HOME VISUALLY FRIENDLY

  • Use visual timers instead of verbal countdowns
  • Install doorbell lights & vibrating alerts
  • Add captions to family movie nights
  • Use gesture + pointing until you learn more signs

3️⃣ LEARN SIGN LANGUAGE TOGETHER You don’t need to be fluent tomorrow! Start with: ✨ 5 signs this week (more, help, eat, drink, love) ✨ Sign during routine activities (bath time, meals) ✨ Make it FUN—sign to music, play sign language games ✨ Let your child TEACH you—it empowers them!

4️⃣ STOP REPEATING—START SHOWING If they don’t understand, don’t just say it louder or repeat 10 times. SHOW them. Use objects, pictures, gestures, or write it down.

5️⃣ INCLUDE THEM IN CONVERSATIONS Don’t talk “around” your child. If family is chatting, summarize in sign. If they’re excluded from dinner table talk, you’re missing precious bonding time.


👉 Real talk: The biggest barrier isn’t your child’s hearing—it’s the communication gap WE create when we don’t adapt.

Your child is watching. They’re learning. They’re waiting for YOU to meet them where they are. And when you do? Magic happens. 💙

Drop a ❤️ if you’re committed to learning sign language with your child!

What’s ONE thing you’ll try this week? Tell me below! 👇


💬 SAVE THIS POST and come back when you need a reminder!


#DeafKids #ASL #SignLanguage #DeafFamily #ParentingDeafChildren #LearnASL #DeafCommunity #HardOfHearing #InclusiveParenting #DeafAwareness #FamilyASL #DeafChildren #VisualCommunication #DeafCulture #BilingualKids #DeafEducation

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“But my baby passed the newborn hearing test…”

November 25, 2025

Here’s what many parents don’t know: hearing can change as your child grows.

EARLY SIGNS your child might be deaf or hard of hearing:

🔹 0-3 months: Doesn’t startle at loud sounds or turn toward your voice

🔹 4-8 months: Not babbling or responding to their name by 6 months

🔹 9-12 months: No response to sounds behind them, limited sound experimentation

🔹 12-24 months: Not saying single words by 15 months, watching your face intensely while you talk, turning up TV/devices very loud

Here’s the truth: Early identification changes EVERYTHING. The earlier you know, the earlier your child can access language—whether that’s sign language, spoken language, or both.

What to do: ✅ Trust your instincts—you know your child best ✅ Ask your pediatrician for a hearing evaluation (not just a screening) ✅ Connect with an audiologist who specializes in pediatrics ✅ Know that deaf/HoH kids thrive with early support!

Remember: A diagnosis isn’t a tragedy—it’s information. And information is power. Your child’s journey starts here. 💙


#DeafKids #HardOfHearing #DeafAwareness #EarlyIntervention #ParentingTips #ASL #HearingLoss #DeafCommunity #PediatricAudiology #DeafChildren #InclusiveParenting #SignLanguage

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Technology and assistive devices | RNID

August 29, 2025

Stay independent – and continue to enjoy the things you want to do – by making the best of new and existing technology.

Alerting devices

Smoke alarm systems

If you are deaf or have hearing loss, there are smoke alarm systems available that can help alert you when an alarm goes off in your home.

Alarm clocks, baby monitors and multi-alerting systems
If you are deaf or have hearing loss, there are devices available that can help alert you when an alarm goes off in your home.

Doorbells
If you are deaf or have hearing loss, you may find it difficult to hear the doorbell if it’s near the front door or in the hallway. There are devices available that can help alert you when someone is at the door.

Communication

Hearing aids
If you’ve been diagnosed with hearing loss, hearing aids could help you to hear better and communicate more confidently.

Making conversations clearer
There are technologies you can use to make speech and conversations clearer.

How to use accessibility features on video conferencing apps
We look at the accessibility features of 3 of the most popular video conferencing apps and explain how you can use them to make communication easier.

Speech-to-text smartphone apps for deaf people and those with hearing loss and tinnitus
We look at 7 popular speech-to-text (STT) apps for smartphones and compare their features.

Click here to learn more.

https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Technology-and-assistive-devices.png 900 900 geelearn https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hearosLogoRound.png geelearn2025-08-29 07:49:002025-08-26 16:13:01Technology and assistive devices | RNID

How to set alerts on your phone for those who are deaf or hard of hearing | Fox News

August 22, 2024

Despite being attached to our phones, it is easy to miss an alert or notification of incoming calls or messages. For those who are hearing impaired or deaf, the risk of missing alerts or notifications is increased.

Michael wrote in with the following question to highlight this important issue:

“My wife is deaf. Is there a Bluetooth device that will light a flasher or vibrator when her phone rings in her pocket?” — Michael, Sugar Land, Texas

Depending on her specific device, several setting options are likely already available on her phone that can increase the chances of her getting alerts or notifications by flashing or vibrating.

How to set up your iPhone to flash an LED light for calls or notifications

If you have an iPhone, you can use one of its settings to make it flash a bright LED light every time an alert or call comes in. This is a visible indicator, which can help those who are hard of hearing or deaf have a better chance of knowing they received an alert or call.

Click here to learn more about:

  • how to enable LED flashes for alerts and calls.
  • how to set up your Apple Watch to vibrate when your iPhone rings.
  • How to set up your Android to flash an LED light for calls or notifications
  • LED light notifications apps for Android users
https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/How2SetAlertsOnYourPhone4ThoseWhoAreDHH.jpg 900 900 geelearn https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hearosLogoRound.png geelearn2024-08-22 05:02:022024-08-23 05:07:27How to set alerts on your phone for those who are deaf or hard of hearing | Fox News

Enjoying Celebrations – How to manage weddings, funerals, and everything in between!

July 3, 2024
Read more
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How to communicate with a Deaf customer while ordering. | YouTube-somedeafguy

December 31, 2021
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https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/how2CommunicateWithaDeafCustomerWhileOrdering.jpg 500 500 Catherine Broadhead https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hearosLogoRound.png Catherine Broadhead2021-12-31 18:07:422021-12-31 18:12:34How to communicate with a Deaf customer while ordering. | YouTube-somedeafguy

How to enable live auto captioning in zoom/ | PSTCC

November 4, 2021
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https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/enableAutoCaptioningInZoom.jpg 500 500 Catherine Broadhead https://www.neohear.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hearosLogoRound.png Catherine Broadhead2021-11-04 20:14:072021-11-04 20:15:20How to enable live auto captioning in zoom/ | PSTCC

Create a personalised digital communication card – RNID

May 8, 2021
Read more
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Deaf Success in Fall 2020: Guide for Families, Parents, and Students | YouTube video

October 10, 2020
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