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The Atlanta Speech School's Learning Lab is an individual or small group intervention program that serves individuals age four through college-age needing assistance to achieve academic success. Lab instructors use formal (standardized achievement) and non-formal (teacher-developed) assessment data to monitor progress.
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) [1] is a not-for-profit children's healthcare system located in the Atlanta area. It is dedicated to caring for infants, children, teens, and young adults age 0–21 throughout Georgia. [2]
1974 – Supplemental Security Income, a United States government program that provides stipends to low-income people who are either blind or otherwise disabled, or aged 65 or older [107] was created in 1974 to replace federal-state adult assistance programs that served the same purpose.
An adult daycare center is typically a non-residential facility that supports the health, nutritional, social, and daily living needs of adults in a professionally staffed, group setting. These facilities provide adults with transitional care and short-term rehabilitation following hospital discharge .
Autism Speaks Inc. is an American non-profit autism awareness organization and the largest autism research organization in the United States. [4] [5] [6] It sponsors autism research and conducts awareness and outreach activities aimed at families, governments, and the public. [4]
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Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (Children's) Egleston Hospital is a former hospital facility in Atlanta. On Sept. 29, 2024, clinical services, including the Emergency Department, at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (Children's) Egleston Hospital moved to Arthur M. Blank Hospital. The future of the Egleston campus has yet to be determined.
AASD was established in the 1970s. [4] In 1979, Georgia State University professor of special education Dr. Glenn Vergason stated that because of the trend of "mainstreaming" deaf children into regular classes, which would mean less reliance on state-operated schools for the deaf, "I've had the feeling that the Atlanta Area School for the Deaf was built at the wrong time".