Question
Which of the following people would fall into the category of "Hard of Hearing"?
(1 point)
Responses
Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language
Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language
Dwight, who lost all of his hearing at 59
Dwight, who lost all of his hearing at 59
Amy, who does not have diagnosed hearing loss but chooses to attend a school for the Deaf in order to learn ASL
Amy, who does not have diagnosed hearing loss but chooses to attend a school for the Deaf in order to learn ASL
Michael, who was born deaf but miraculously regained full hearing capacity after getting into a car accident
(1 point)
Responses
Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language
Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language
Dwight, who lost all of his hearing at 59
Dwight, who lost all of his hearing at 59
Amy, who does not have diagnosed hearing loss but chooses to attend a school for the Deaf in order to learn ASL
Amy, who does not have diagnosed hearing loss but chooses to attend a school for the Deaf in order to learn ASL
Michael, who was born deaf but miraculously regained full hearing capacity after getting into a car accident
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The person who would fall into the category of "Hard of Hearing" is:
**Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language.**
This is because individuals who are "Hard of Hearing" typically have some level of residual hearing but may use various forms of communication. The other individuals described either have profound hearing loss or are deaf, which would not typically be classified under "Hard of Hearing."
**Sarah, who has mild hearing loss and communicates through both sign language and spoken language.**
This is because individuals who are "Hard of Hearing" typically have some level of residual hearing but may use various forms of communication. The other individuals described either have profound hearing loss or are deaf, which would not typically be classified under "Hard of Hearing."