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Making the transition
from high school to college is often tough. Making it with essentially
no hearing is even tougher. But, for first-year Calvin student Nathaniel
Veltman, a solid support system is making his first semester in Grand
Rapids a good one.
Veltman, a native
of Cochrane, Ontario, began losing his hearing when he was about five
years old. He now is completely deaf in his left ear and has about 25
to 30 percent of normal hearing capacity in his right ear.
So how is he adjusting
to life at Calvin? He has some significant strategies, tricks he's honed
over the years plus assistance in several key areas from Calvin.
For one, Veltman
relies on reading lips to understand people. But he is an auditory learner,
meaning he learns best by hearing things spoken. So, he sits in the
front row in every class at Calvin to be sure he can read the professor's
lips. But, he also gives each of his professors a portable microphone
that they wear around their necks. It has a wireless connection to his
hearing aid and he can adjust the volume with a remote he always keeps
in his pocket. The volume control comes in handy; occasionally Veltman
has picked up the hungry growl of a professor's stomach.
Veltman also works
closely with Calvin's Karen Broekstra, who works with students with
disabilities. They touch base regularly through both e-mail and face-to-face
meetings to discuss how classes are going, what solutions are working
and where different strategies could be implemented.
Residence hall
life poses other challenges. To supplement the fire alarm, which he
might not hear, Calvin has installed a blinking strobe light in Veltman's
room. And to make sure he gets to class on time he has a special vibrating
alarm clock under his pillow to shake him out of bed.
While it helps
to have his twin brother Ben (who is not hearing-impaired) as his roommate,
Veltman says social situations can still be hard to deal with. "It's
harder to talk with people in groups, because they go back and forth
really fast," he says. Sometimes people don't want to take the
time to understand him, or even if they do, they're not sure how to
act.
Veltman says it's
actually pretty simple: have only one person talk at once, pronounce
words clearly so he can read lips and be patient.
Veltman is being
helped by Calvin financially, including being a recipient of Calvin's
Mephibosheth Scholarship. This award is made possible by a donation
to Calvin in 1987 by Peter DeKorte (1907-1993), a friend of Calvin who
was disabled at the age of two by spinal meningitis and spent the rest
of his life as an advocate for the disabled. The name of the scholarship
refers to a grandson of King Saul who was crippled in both feet, but
who, says the Old Testament's II Samuel, ate at the King's table.
Right now Veltman
is planning to major in history and geography. When he's not doing homework
or working in the library, he enjoys reading and playing basketball
with his brothers (his brother Greg is a junior at Calvin) or with his
residence hall (his floor, Second Boer, recently won the dorm basketball
tournament). He also likes listening to music on his CD player, which
he can attach directly to his hearing aid. "Everyone else has to
wear those big headphones," he says with a smile.
~with reporting
by media relations student writer Abe Huyser-Honig
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