| Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces? | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
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From: Sharon Villines (sharon |
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| Date: Sun, 1 Mar 2026 08:17:59 -0800 (PST) | |
> On Mar 1, 2026, at 9:34 AM, Carol Agate via Cohousing-L <cohousing-l [at] > cohousing.org> wrote: > In our meetings we always have some members on zoom. The captions are turned > on, and their accuracy has been steadily improving. Takoma Village set up meetings on Zoom during the Pandemic and we kept it. It was was a huge relief because it was so clear, so easy to hear. The technology was a bit daunting for most members to learn so consult carefully about what you need. The negative is that we were no longer all in the same room. But many more people came to meetings. And members who were traveling or living part of the year someplace else were able to attand meetings. It just took practice on the part of the facilitators and others in organizing the meetings. On 2026-02-28 17:21, Allison Tom via Cohousing-L wrote: > I have a moderate hearing loss and use hearing aids, but I am constantly > struggling to hear in meetings in our common house. Some of it seems to be > about the acoustics of the space, and some about people not remembering to > speak up. Advice: Find out how much your members can really hear. For years I raised the issue of speaking up and the issue of hearing became “only one person can’t hear.” But my concern was not just my ability to hear everyone; it was being sure that everyone could hear everyone. How does self-governance work if only some people can hear in governance meetings. I seem to hear perfectly well except in large rooms even if the large rooms have only a few people in them. And some people will not speak up no matter what. Asking them to speak up means they won’t speak at all. I asked one of our members who I knew was deaf in one ear and had weak hearing in the other, how she coped in meetings. She said, “If it is important, the facilitator will repeat it.” So she was missing anything said in a meeting that wasn’t repeated, which was a lot of stuff. Suddenly some of her off-topic or repetitive comments made sense. She was only hearing a small piece of the meeting. The reason for this is acoustics. All the sounds echo around the room. They bounce off the floor to the bottoms of tables and bounce back again. Sound is like the images of vibrations in diagrams, than the straight line we think we are hearing. Sound goes everywhere, then back again. The less bouncy the less blurry the sound is. Hotel meeting rooms are carpeted for a reason. The carpet might get dirty, but otherwise hearing would be impossible. If you want to know who can hear and who cannot or who can hear at least the people who speak up, do a private poll asking who can hear and how well they can hear. Groups.io and Google polls are very easy to set up. They can be anonymous or not. Don’t just ask, “Can you hear?” or “Do you think we need professional help?” Ask can you hear everyone, is listening tiring, do you feel comfortable speaking up, etc. Include space for comments. People will have things to say that you hadn’t thought to ask about. Like the woman who figured out if it was important the facilitator would repeat it so that’s all she tried to hear. Another member recorded the meeting on their iPhone and listened to it later. (So much for participation.) None of these work-arounds were common knowledge because everyone was quietly finding personal solutions. Sharon ---- Sharon Villines Riderwood Village, Silver Spring MD Founding Member, 25 years in Takoma Village, Washington DC
- Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces?, (continued)
- Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces? Debbie Behrens, February 28 2026
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Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces? Mabel Liang, February 28 2026
- Re: Hearing loops in common spaces? Anne Geraghty, February 28 2026
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Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces? Carol Agate, March 1 2026
- Re: Experiences with hearing loops in common spaces? Sharon Villines, March 1 2026
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