District files appeal against deaf student

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Because people like jackie and rich think their way is better.




See my prior comment. Seriously. On another note, they would have to set up an exploratory committee to write up a feasibility study for this. Then it has to go to review. Then back to the committee to tweek it because of things in the study that the committee doesn't like (besides all of it). This could take years, if not decades. In other words, she and others like her are hostile to it, because it is something they didn't think of first and they're mad about it and will not make it part of the policy.

You know, I have a nephew who teaches social studies at the high school level in a public school. He is an excellent teacher, not just by my estimation, but by the number of awards he has won, the comments of his students,a nd the comments of the students' parents. He is all about getting the kids to think critically.

Anyway, in reference to his classroom. He changed his seating arrangement years ago to a horseshoe arrangement because he believes that even with hearing students, that sort of arrangement is less isolating and encourages themto take part in class discussions, etc. He can see all of his students at once, and they can see him.

Just saying, sometimes the traditional way is not the best way for any student. Takes an educator that can think outside the box and is dedicated to their students to make a few changes that are for the better education of the students. And sometimes, its the small, low tech, low cost solutions that provide the most benefit.
 
Thank you, Pete. I've had problems with bouts of depressions since grade school days and some of have been so bad that I used to wonder if I'd live to be 40. Problems with depression and Bipolar runs in my family; several members of my family have been hospitlized for it.

Both of my parents have worked in the medical field; my dad is a retired doctor and my mom was a nurse before she married my father.

They've known I was deaf since I was 9 mo old. I do not recall many visits with my audiologist though. My parents are not very flexible about things and I think that's what caused a lot of problems for me.

I agree with you on the inflexibility. That is one of my objections to an oral environment. It is the most inflexible way to raise and educate a child. If a child shows sign of difficulties with the oral method, the solution is more oral method. Kind of like running your head into a brick wall, and when it doesn't fall down, backing up and running your head into the wall again....over and over and over! Wall never comes down, you just end up with a hell of a headache!
 
jag,
the only reason why class even came up is b/c its a FACT that those with more money tend to be more sucessful and to have the abilty to channel more resources into their kid's educations. Like even a "working class" family with OK private insurance will be more sucessful then a working class family with state insurance.

DD you are making assumptions again. I am not sure if I mention this before but my son received his implant when he was three years old. At the time, I wasn't working because found it difficult to raise 2 deaf children and work full time. I had to go on public assistance for a time. My son's implant was paid by the state's medical and CCS program. I did not go back to college until my son was 6 years old. So DD you are wrong again about your assumptions. Now because of my fight to get an implant fo rmy son, and he was the first one approved in our county, it is a standard surgery that children on state medical insurance can get in California.
 
Because people like jackie and rich think their way is better.

Pete. really I do not think my way is better. It was better for us but I know it is the best for all families.



See my prior comment. Seriously. On another note, they would have to set up an exploratory committee to write up a feasibility study for this. Then it has to go to review. Then back to the committee to tweek it because of things in the study that the committee doesn't like (besides all of it). This could take years, if not decades. In other words, she and others like her are hostile to it, because it is something they didn't think of first and they're mad about it and will not make it part of the policy.

Really Pete I am not hostile to whatever views other people have. What I am hostile to is the fact that people cannot respect my views for my children. It is not my place to tell other parents how to raise their children. I do not see ASL as a crutch, I see it as a good way of life for people who use it. It is a personal choice.
 
I hope jackie and rich read this and cry. This is what they both support and it could have triggered you to commit suicide. My own experience wasn't that bad, but I have been called lazy, before the incompetent doctors/audiologists misdiagnosed my own hearing loss, long last, before my fifth grade year.

Why deaf/hoh are forced to learn to speak foreign languages is beyond me. I tried both Swedish and Danish and failed them both. Fortunately, they weren't taken for college credit! The teacher that said that to you was incompetent and needs to return to school herself to learn how hearing and learning affects the deaf/hoh child. Obviously, she wasn't paying attention that day when they covered it at the undergraduate level.

Your family, specifically your parents. This is so sad. I don't believe for one minute they "tried" to get help for you. I hope rick and jackie see this and it makes them question, deep down, if their method is the best method for deaf/hoh children, especially their own. I don't believe it is, based on not only my own experience, but the experiences of several other deaf/hoh people on alldeaf. By fifth grade, that comment was way too early to make by your mother, as she doesn't know. I know my parents were helping me one time with math and my dad got mad at me because I couldn't understand it that he slapped me hard on the back. To this day, I despise math and believe it shouldn't have to be a required class in college.

But, to blame yourself, honey, is not your place. YOU (capital letters used for emphasis) did the best you could under the circumstances and you've proven people like jackie and rick wrong, as well as all other oralists. None of this is your fault and you are not to blame yourself. This blame goes first to your parents who allowed you to be in an oralist setting (which is what jackie and rich like and what they enjoy seeing deaf/hoh students struggle), your teachers, the school and the school district. Last, but not least, your doctors are also at fault for not catching this. Your audiologist should have been aware of this. A reason for not being so is probably something the educators enjoyed keeping it from him/her.


Pete, I am very sorry for her. I have read what she has written. The difference between her and my children are that I listen to my children. I pay attention to them. I do not blame them for things they cannot control. I am so so sorry that her parents have never taken the time to listen to her and her needs.
It is OK if you think I am like her parents because you do not know well enough to judge me that way but if you need to do that to make you feel better please go right ahead.
 
Hi As some of you know the topic of the newspaper article written about my daughter and our fight for CART is being discussed in another forum and of course Jillo has been trying to prove me wrong over and over again like she does here. This student that is studing to be an interpreted has been arguing with Jillo. I have posted his response to her. I think he said it so well.

Quote by: jillio
Chances are, they agreed with you just to shut you up, as they got the same impression I did. That you are wide eyed and innocent, and refuse to see how little you actually know about the issue are are attempting to discuss.

Tell me why they aren't interchangeable. Transcribers provide quality accessibility for oral Deaf. The only difference is their target consumer. They cost the same. They even process information along the same seven step process that interpreters use to bring the message from the teacher's mouth to the computer screen. The only reason they aren't interchangeable is because YOU don't want them to be. You have yet to tell me a logical reason the two are not interchangeable. Because of that, until you actually post some kind of logical and proven reason they aren't interchangeable as Fuji and Red Delicious Apples are, don't say it again. Until then you are trolling on the issue.

I have resources I can use including the two following people whom I will post credentials for:

SAVITA ADAMS, Instructor of Deaf Studies, 2006
BA, Madonna University; MS, Western Oregon University.

LISA A. GODFREY, Assistant Professor of Deaf Studies, Chair Department of Sign Language Interpreting, 1997.
A.A.S., Mott Community College; B.A., University of Michigan; M.S. Ferris State University; M.M., Northeastern University; CI, CT, Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf; ASLTA-Q, American Sign Language Teacher's Association. Board Member CCTRID.

Savita is Deaf and the two of them have experience in your field outstripping you easily. Lisa and Savita have both promoted CART as being a better alternative to terps for oral Deaf, as well as the CCTRID and TNAD boards. Since I don't know everything, I trust to sources who are more knowledgeable on the topics. I have made it a habit to talk to the people in the upper tiers of these organizations and get their opinions on these things. I also look up research articles and such items in my free time. Nothing I have found on CART suggests it is not interchangeable with interpreters in the case of the oral Deaf. Its like getting a fuji apple for a person who wants to make a tart apple juice. In that case, you get a Granny Smith. However, if someone wants a sweet apple, get them a fuji and they will be extremely happy with you.

The definition of audist is a person who thinks themselves better based on hearing status. You portray in your posts a person who thinks manually raised or operating Deaf are superiorly raised to orally raised. You may not think you do, but that is the picture I have made of you over time. Because orally raised Deaf use hearing assistance and speech/lipreading lessons to get by, there is an easy way to tell the difference between the two for someone who knows the signs. You show more respect for the Deaf people who go manual than for the oral in your posts, and that is not my opinion, instead it is the opinion of my Ethics teacher.

If you actually told me instead of makingit a blurb, I would catch it. Most of my time I am doing this and a dozen other things. Little blurbs get missed. I apologize.

However, your beliefs in the rightness and wrongness of it have been portrayed in your posts. I might not be a psychologist, but I know when someone lets such beliefs could their decision.

You forget I used to be a law student before I switched to interpreting. CART is covered by the same laws that terps are. Because of that, lawyers will see the two as interchangeable.

35 grand would be the cost of accomodation for ANY Deaf kid. What the heck reason has it been argued about if it wasn't a concern. In fact, the school rep said himself that he couldn't justify 35 grand for it. Why did he say it if he weren't concerned about it?

I already have a job guaranteed to me when I graduate. So finding a job wasn't that difficult. However, the difficulty of finding employment wasn't tangent to the debate. On topic, It doesn't matter your experience if it can't help in an oral situation. You said yourself that oral methods are different from manual methods. They aren't interchangeable from one to the next, however, they are balancers of eachother. There will always be oral Deaf and Manual Deaf. Thus, there will always be both CART and terps. They must be applied where appropriate. A note-taker is not near sufficient accessibility for a Deaf student, and I don't care how much experience you have if what you state goes against ethical sensibilities. Giving her only a note-taker is telling her she isn't worth the trouble of getting proper accomodation. Psychologically, such treatment can create an ongoing thought patten that the person is not worthy of proper treatment, creating a potential for not just low education, but also future bouts with depression. I am looking at it from both educational and psychological views. You think if the school wins the case that she will feel like taking on the system again if in the future someone denies her accessibility via CART? Most likely, she won't, because the public has told her she isn't worth it. No, not the public, simply people like you who think their years of experience outrank her own knowledge of her situation. Nobody, and I mean nobody, understands the student's situation better than the student herself. What would happen if Jackie were to allow her daughter to speak directly to you and tell you what she wanted? Being closer to her age than you, I have a good idea of what she wants. She wants to have a social life. She wants to be able to come home and just have to do homework in a normal load instead of doing both the classwork and homework at home and missing out on life. I missed out on a lot of life because of my family working at the market, but I was at least able to go places and do things without needing to worry about how much I missed in my lessons. Sure, she will be able to function in ife without CART, but only because of her parents. If she is going to be in the school, the school should at least provide the bare necessities instead of cutting the student off of the most important part of a child's life by making her do the work twice. It is easier to succeed than to fail. The reason is because she is failing to gain information in school to a great degree. Because of that, she needs to get the information in her own terms at home.

last I checked, a parent is not legally required to provide the child's education beyond sending them to school. It is her parent's duty to make sure that the school is giving her education instead of a bunch of iron shackles.

A side note, I have been given a warm welcome into the Deaf community and out of the ones I have met, only one Deaf person (raised orally) has been unwilling to work with me. Of the Deaf people I have informed of my position in this debate, I have not had one disagree with me. I have been invited to join Harvest Deaf Bible School to do my Sign Language interpretation and have even been offered by Deaf members of the Starke Deaf community to help out in a Deaf choir. I have not only read about the Deaf community, I am actively involved in it and well on my way to finishing my interpreting training. In fact, as I see it, the only person involved with the Deaf community to disagree with me so far is you. That gives me a 50 some-odd advantage in favor of me. 50 members of the Deaf community agreeing with me, and you disagreeing with me. Who do you think is going to hold more sway in my acceptance into the Deaf community? Yourself? or the ones who know me?

She pays taxes, which pays the school.

3.8 GPA only says she is getting an education. It doesn't say she is getting it in the school. She is getting her education via her mother's vigilance. Her mother's vigilance is the only reason we are debating this.

No you just misinterpreted what I said, again. I said it is not her job to teach her child. It is her job to make sure the child is educated. This includes pushing the school's hand on the CART services.

And again, 3.8 gpa only says she is succeeding in school tests, not that she is being taught by the school or that the school is providing her education.

No, I am not as wide eyed and innocent as I look. I learn by gathering information. I type up research reports for fun. All I need to do to make a research report for my Ethics class is go on my computer and print off the report of my choice. I have reports scattered across the web, on different report rating sites and essay sites. 1 in 5 will be rated less than silver. This method of learning allows me to accrue knowledge someone took years to learn in the span of a few short weeks.

My favorite report, however, was for my Psychology class, wherein I looked up possible causes of depression. Lo and behold, there sat a situation similar to this wherein a person was denied an accessibility, in this case braille schoolbooks, in the years prior to ADA, and was denied this in court. Because his appeal was denied, he developed a false sensibility that he wasn't worth getting such things. Sound fun?
 
And another case of the pot calling the kettle black!

Hey I am not the one making up things, BTW Petey have you found that post yet where you said that I trashed deaf children or are you ready to admit that you just made it up?
 
Really Pete I am not hostile to whatever views other people have. What I am hostile to is the fact that people cannot respect my views for my children. It is not my place to tell other parents how to raise their children. I do not see ASL as a crutch, I see it as a good way of life for people who use it. It is a personal choice.

Great attitude Jackie! Hard to understand why you are being attacked for your views.
Rick
 
Hi As some of you know the topic of the newspaper article written about my daughter and our fight for CART is being discussed in another forum and of course Jillo has been trying to prove me wrong over and over again like she does here. This student that is studing to be an interpreted has been arguing with Jillo. I have posted his response to her. I think he said it so well.

Quote by: jillio
Chances are, they agreed with you just to shut you up, as they got the same impression I did. That you are wide eyed and innocent, and refuse to see how little you actually know about the issue are are attempting to discuss.

Tell me why they aren't interchangeable. Transcribers provide quality accessibility for oral Deaf. The only difference is their target consumer. They cost the same. They even process information along the same seven step process that interpreters use to bring the message from the teacher's mouth to the computer screen. The only reason they aren't interchangeable is because YOU don't want them to be. You have yet to tell me a logical reason the two are not interchangeable. Because of that, until you actually post some kind of logical and proven reason they aren't interchangeable as Fuji and Red Delicious Apples are, don't say it again. Until then you are trolling on the issue.

I have resources I can use including the two following people whom I will post credentials for:

SAVITA ADAMS, Instructor of Deaf Studies, 2006
BA, Madonna University; MS, Western Oregon University.

LISA A. GODFREY, Assistant Professor of Deaf Studies, Chair Department of Sign Language Interpreting, 1997.
A.A.S., Mott Community College; B.A., University of Michigan; M.S. Ferris State University; M.M., Northeastern University; CI, CT, Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf; ASLTA-Q, American Sign Language Teacher's Association. Board Member CCTRID.

Savita is Deaf and the two of them have experience in your field outstripping you easily. Lisa and Savita have both promoted CART as being a better alternative to terps for oral Deaf, as well as the CCTRID and TNAD boards. Since I don't know everything, I trust to sources who are more knowledgeable on the topics. I have made it a habit to talk to the people in the upper tiers of these organizations and get their opinions on these things. I also look up research articles and such items in my free time. Nothing I have found on CART suggests it is not interchangeable with interpreters in the case of the oral Deaf. Its like getting a fuji apple for a person who wants to make a tart apple juice. In that case, you get a Granny Smith. However, if someone wants a sweet apple, get them a fuji and they will be extremely happy with you.

The definition of audist is a person who thinks themselves better based on hearing status. You portray in your posts a person who thinks manually raised or operating Deaf are superiorly raised to orally raised. You may not think you do, but that is the picture I have made of you over time. Because orally raised Deaf use hearing assistance and speech/lipreading lessons to get by, there is an easy way to tell the difference between the two for someone who knows the signs. You show more respect for the Deaf people who go manual than for the oral in your posts, and that is not my opinion, instead it is the opinion of my Ethics teacher.

If you actually told me instead of makingit a blurb, I would catch it. Most of my time I am doing this and a dozen other things. Little blurbs get missed. I apologize.

However, your beliefs in the rightness and wrongness of it have been portrayed in your posts. I might not be a psychologist, but I know when someone lets such beliefs could their decision.

You forget I used to be a law student before I switched to interpreting. CART is covered by the same laws that terps are. Because of that, lawyers will see the two as interchangeable.

35 grand would be the cost of accomodation for ANY Deaf kid. What the heck reason has it been argued about if it wasn't a concern. In fact, the school rep said himself that he couldn't justify 35 grand for it. Why did he say it if he weren't concerned about it?

I already have a job guaranteed to me when I graduate. So finding a job wasn't that difficult. However, the difficulty of finding employment wasn't tangent to the debate. On topic, It doesn't matter your experience if it can't help in an oral situation. You said yourself that oral methods are different from manual methods. They aren't interchangeable from one to the next, however, they are balancers of eachother. There will always be oral Deaf and Manual Deaf. Thus, there will always be both CART and terps. They must be applied where appropriate. A note-taker is not near sufficient accessibility for a Deaf student, and I don't care how much experience you have if what you state goes against ethical sensibilities. Giving her only a note-taker is telling her she isn't worth the trouble of getting proper accomodation. Psychologically, such treatment can create an ongoing thought patten that the person is not worthy of proper treatment, creating a potential for not just low education, but also future bouts with depression. I am looking at it from both educational and psychological views. You think if the school wins the case that she will feel like taking on the system again if in the future someone denies her accessibility via CART? Most likely, she won't, because the public has told her she isn't worth it. No, not the public, simply people like you who think their years of experience outrank her own knowledge of her situation. Nobody, and I mean nobody, understands the student's situation better than the student herself. What would happen if Jackie were to allow her daughter to speak directly to you and tell you what she wanted? Being closer to her age than you, I have a good idea of what she wants. She wants to have a social life. She wants to be able to come home and just have to do homework in a normal load instead of doing both the classwork and homework at home and missing out on life. I missed out on a lot of life because of my family working at the market, but I was at least able to go places and do things without needing to worry about how much I missed in my lessons. Sure, she will be able to function in ife without CART, but only because of her parents. If she is going to be in the school, the school should at least provide the bare necessities instead of cutting the student off of the most important part of a child's life by making her do the work twice. It is easier to succeed than to fail. The reason is because she is failing to gain information in school to a great degree. Because of that, she needs to get the information in her own terms at home.

last I checked, a parent is not legally required to provide the child's education beyond sending them to school. It is her parent's duty to make sure that the school is giving her education instead of a bunch of iron shackles.

A side note, I have been given a warm welcome into the Deaf community and out of the ones I have met, only one Deaf person (raised orally) has been unwilling to work with me. Of the Deaf people I have informed of my position in this debate, I have not had one disagree with me. I have been invited to join Harvest Deaf Bible School to do my Sign Language interpretation and have even been offered by Deaf members of the Starke Deaf community to help out in a Deaf choir. I have not only read about the Deaf community, I am actively involved in it and well on my way to finishing my interpreting training. In fact, as I see it, the only person involved with the Deaf community to disagree with me so far is you. That gives me a 50 some-odd advantage in favor of me. 50 members of the Deaf community agreeing with me, and you disagreeing with me. Who do you think is going to hold more sway in my acceptance into the Deaf community? Yourself? or the ones who know me?

She pays taxes, which pays the school.

3.8 GPA only says she is getting an education. It doesn't say she is getting it in the school. She is getting her education via her mother's vigilance. Her mother's vigilance is the only reason we are debating this.

No you just misinterpreted what I said, again. I said it is not her job to teach her child. It is her job to make sure the child is educated. This includes pushing the school's hand on the CART services.

And again, 3.8 gpa only says she is succeeding in school tests, not that she is being taught by the school or that the school is providing her education.

No, I am not as wide eyed and innocent as I look. I learn by gathering information. I type up research reports for fun. All I need to do to make a research report for my Ethics class is go on my computer and print off the report of my choice. I have reports scattered across the web, on different report rating sites and essay sites. 1 in 5 will be rated less than silver. This method of learning allows me to accrue knowledge someone took years to learn in the span of a few short weeks.

My favorite report, however, was for my Psychology class, wherein I looked up possible causes of depression. Lo and behold, there sat a situation similar to this wherein a person was denied an accessibility, in this case braille schoolbooks, in the years prior to ADA, and was denied this in court. Because his appeal was denied, he developed a false sensibility that he wasn't worth getting such things. Sound fun?


Jackie,

Where did this discussion take place? On this forum?
Rick
 
My problem is that she was interpreting in a situation in which a misinterpreted word or phrase could very well lead to a parent's misunderstanding of the situation. In legal, educational, and medical situations, a professional, trained terp should be used at all times to insure that accurate interpretation is being accomplished and that ethical guidelines are being followed.

I see what you are saying and the point you are making, however I heard of a situation wherein a college is actually sending an upperclassman who knows sign into the classroom with a deaf student. This would be a situation exactly wherein that college and that upperclass man student are not adhereing to ethical guidelines and there is no way to insure that the deaf student is getting accurate interpretation. Don't you agree?
 
Pete, I am very sorry for her. I have read what she has written. The difference between her and my children are that I listen to my children. I pay attention to them. I do not blame them for things they cannot control. I am so so sorry that her parents have never taken the time to listen to her and her needs.
It is OK if you think I am like her parents because you do not know well enough to judge me that way but if you need to do that to make you feel better please go right ahead.

Jackie,

Two deaf kids and public assistance for you; deafskeptic had a doctor dad and nurse mother (can you hear the money dripping like a faucet?). These are two things that I did not know. I apologize to you for jumping to judgment about you, as I'm sure you skipped many a meal so that your kids could eat, not to mention your stress level trying to get help. I should not have made that comment.

I'm fortunate now that I can get help in the classroom and hearing aids at state expense, but on the side, I just applied for MA and SSI and am feeling so run down, not just because of what's going on here. This fuels me for what I want to do with the rest of my life after graduating in 1 1/2 years, which is law school. I'd still like to see kids learn asl as well as speech, but not one over the other, they need to be taught together.
 
Hi As some of you know the topic of the newspaper article written about my daughter and our fight for CART is being discussed in another forum and of course Jillo has been trying to prove me wrong over and over again like she does here. This student that is studing to be an interpreted has been arguing with Jillo. I have posted his response to her. I think he said it so well.

Quote by: jillio
Chances are, they agreed with you just to shut you up, as they got the same impression I did. That you are wide eyed and innocent, and refuse to see how little you actually know about the issue are are attempting to discuss.

Tell me why they aren't interchangeable. Transcribers provide quality accessibility for oral Deaf. The only difference is their target consumer. They cost the same. They even process information along the same seven step process that interpreters use to bring the message from the teacher's mouth to the computer screen. The only reason they aren't interchangeable is because YOU don't want them to be. You have yet to tell me a logical reason the two are not interchangeable. Because of that, until you actually post some kind of logical and proven reason they aren't interchangeable as Fuji and Red Delicious Apples are, don't say it again. Until then you are trolling on the issue.

I have resources I can use including the two following people whom I will post credentials for:

SAVITA ADAMS, Instructor of Deaf Studies, 2006
BA, Madonna University; MS, Western Oregon University.

LISA A. GODFREY, Assistant Professor of Deaf Studies, Chair Department of Sign Language Interpreting, 1997.
A.A.S., Mott Community College; B.A., University of Michigan; M.S. Ferris State University; M.M., Northeastern University; CI, CT, Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf; ASLTA-Q, American Sign Language Teacher's Association. Board Member CCTRID.

Savita is Deaf and the two of them have experience in your field outstripping you easily. Lisa and Savita have both promoted CART as being a better alternative to terps for oral Deaf, as well as the CCTRID and TNAD boards. Since I don't know everything, I trust to sources who are more knowledgeable on the topics. I have made it a habit to talk to the people in the upper tiers of these organizations and get their opinions on these things. I also look up research articles and such items in my free time. Nothing I have found on CART suggests it is not interchangeable with interpreters in the case of the oral Deaf. Its like getting a fuji apple for a person who wants to make a tart apple juice. In that case, you get a Granny Smith. However, if someone wants a sweet apple, get them a fuji and they will be extremely happy with you.

The definition of audist is a person who thinks themselves better based on hearing status. You portray in your posts a person who thinks manually raised or operating Deaf are superiorly raised to orally raised. You may not think you do, but that is the picture I have made of you over time. Because orally raised Deaf use hearing assistance and speech/lipreading lessons to get by, there is an easy way to tell the difference between the two for someone who knows the signs. You show more respect for the Deaf people who go manual than for the oral in your posts, and that is not my opinion, instead it is the opinion of my Ethics teacher.

If you actually told me instead of makingit a blurb, I would catch it. Most of my time I am doing this and a dozen other things. Little blurbs get missed. I apologize.

However, your beliefs in the rightness and wrongness of it have been portrayed in your posts. I might not be a psychologist, but I know when someone lets such beliefs could their decision.

You forget I used to be a law student before I switched to interpreting. CART is covered by the same laws that terps are. Because of that, lawyers will see the two as interchangeable.

35 grand would be the cost of accomodation for ANY Deaf kid. What the heck reason has it been argued about if it wasn't a concern. In fact, the school rep said himself that he couldn't justify 35 grand for it. Why did he say it if he weren't concerned about it?

I already have a job guaranteed to me when I graduate. So finding a job wasn't that difficult. However, the difficulty of finding employment wasn't tangent to the debate. On topic, It doesn't matter your experience if it can't help in an oral situation. You said yourself that oral methods are different from manual methods. They aren't interchangeable from one to the next, however, they are balancers of eachother. There will always be oral Deaf and Manual Deaf. Thus, there will always be both CART and terps. They must be applied where appropriate. A note-taker is not near sufficient accessibility for a Deaf student, and I don't care how much experience you have if what you state goes against ethical sensibilities. Giving her only a note-taker is telling her she isn't worth the trouble of getting proper accomodation. Psychologically, such treatment can create an ongoing thought patten that the person is not worthy of proper treatment, creating a potential for not just low education, but also future bouts with depression. I am looking at it from both educational and psychological views. You think if the school wins the case that she will feel like taking on the system again if in the future someone denies her accessibility via CART? Most likely, she won't, because the public has told her she isn't worth it. No, not the public, simply people like you who think their years of experience outrank her own knowledge of her situation. Nobody, and I mean nobody, understands the student's situation better than the student herself. What would happen if Jackie were to allow her daughter to speak directly to you and tell you what she wanted? Being closer to her age than you, I have a good idea of what she wants. She wants to have a social life. She wants to be able to come home and just have to do homework in a normal load instead of doing both the classwork and homework at home and missing out on life. I missed out on a lot of life because of my family working at the market, but I was at least able to go places and do things without needing to worry about how much I missed in my lessons. Sure, she will be able to function in ife without CART, but only because of her parents. If she is going to be in the school, the school should at least provide the bare necessities instead of cutting the student off of the most important part of a child's life by making her do the work twice. It is easier to succeed than to fail. The reason is because she is failing to gain information in school to a great degree. Because of that, she needs to get the information in her own terms at home.

last I checked, a parent is not legally required to provide the child's education beyond sending them to school. It is her parent's duty to make sure that the school is giving her education instead of a bunch of iron shackles.

A side note, I have been given a warm welcome into the Deaf community and out of the ones I have met, only one Deaf person (raised orally) has been unwilling to work with me. Of the Deaf people I have informed of my position in this debate, I have not had one disagree with me. I have been invited to join Harvest Deaf Bible School to do my Sign Language interpretation and have even been offered by Deaf members of the Starke Deaf community to help out in a Deaf choir. I have not only read about the Deaf community, I am actively involved in it and well on my way to finishing my interpreting training. In fact, as I see it, the only person involved with the Deaf community to disagree with me so far is you. That gives me a 50 some-odd advantage in favor of me. 50 members of the Deaf community agreeing with me, and you disagreeing with me. Who do you think is going to hold more sway in my acceptance into the Deaf community? Yourself? or the ones who know me?

She pays taxes, which pays the school.

3.8 GPA only says she is getting an education. It doesn't say she is getting it in the school. She is getting her education via her mother's vigilance. Her mother's vigilance is the only reason we are debating this.

No you just misinterpreted what I said, again. I said it is not her job to teach her child. It is her job to make sure the child is educated. This includes pushing the school's hand on the CART services.

And again, 3.8 gpa only says she is succeeding in school tests, not that she is being taught by the school or that the school is providing her education.

No, I am not as wide eyed and innocent as I look. I learn by gathering information. I type up research reports for fun. All I need to do to make a research report for my Ethics class is go on my computer and print off the report of my choice. I have reports scattered across the web, on different report rating sites and essay sites. 1 in 5 will be rated less than silver. This method of learning allows me to accrue knowledge someone took years to learn in the span of a few short weeks.

My favorite report, however, was for my Psychology class, wherein I looked up possible causes of depression. Lo and behold, there sat a situation similar to this wherein a person was denied an accessibility, in this case braille schoolbooks, in the years prior to ADA, and was denied this in court. Because his appeal was denied, he developed a false sensibility that he wasn't worth getting such things. Sound fun?

Yes, jackie, and this is a very young, very new student whohas no idea what he is talking about. He needs to stay in school and have quite a bit more exposure to the DEaf community. The fact that he even applied the word "audist" to me tell s me that he is very new in his education. LIkewise, his only exposure to the Deaf community has been in his very new classes.

He is enthusiastic, and he is idealistic, but he is also very unrealistic and naive. And you certianly haven't won any points with the deaf community by posting his comments here. He has had one intro psych course and fancies himself qualified to speak on the psychological aspects of deafness.

He is taking some ASl classes, and fancies himself an expert on the Deaf.

He was homeschooled and considers himself expert on the subject of the public school system.

He stated early on in the discussion that he was an interpreter. Then later on, he backs down and admits that he has just begun intrpreter training.

He thought you were a single mother.

He didn't not realize that gpa was a grade point average of all of a students's grades. He doesn't know the difference, despite numerous explanations, of the difference between interpretation and transcription.

Sorry, girl, but you haven't increased your credibility one iota. If you want to add credence to your argument, I'd start quoting people a bit more qualified than an adolescent terp in training

Please, jackie, get off the Jillio is picking on me. The fact of the matter is, the person who have jsut quoted is the only one that supports you. Want me to point out some of the other posters that think you are ridiculas?
 
Really Pete I am not hostile to whatever views other people have. What I am hostile to is the fact that people cannot respect my views for my children. It is not my place to tell other parents how to raise their children. I do not see ASL as a crutch, I see it as a good way of life for people who use it. It is a personal choice.

Hey, jackie, I've got an idea. If you want to ber around a group of people who agree with you, go hand out with the oralists. You brought yourself into a deaf forum, and now you want to whine that you haven't been able to convince the deaf people here how wonderful you are. They see right through you, and you can't seem to understand that its because you continually denigrate their experience, present yourself as an expert on something they have lived through, and hear you spouting the same oral philsophies that they keep telling you are harmful to deaf children. You give no credit to their experience. Its all about you. So if you can't handle the dissention you get here, go where they agree with you.
 
I see what you are saying and the point you are making, however I heard of a situation wherein a college is actually sending an upperclassman who knows sign into the classroom with a deaf student. This would be a situation exactly wherein that college and that upperclass man student are not adhereing to ethical guidelines and there is no way to insure that the deaf student is getting accurate interpretation. Don't you agree?

If you are talking about my post referring to upper classmen....this was inregard to notetakers, not interpreters. It is an entirely differnent situation, and if you knew anything about the provision of accommodations, you never would have assumed that the upper classman was functioning as a terp.
 
:gpost::gpost::gpost::gpost::gpost:

Hey, jackie, I've got an idea. If you want to ber around a group of people who agree with you, go hand out with the oralists. You brought yourself into a deaf forum, and now you want to whine that you haven't been able to convince the deaf people here how wonderful you are. They see right through you, and you can't seem to understand that its because you continually denigrate their experience, present yourself as an expert on something they have lived through, and hear you spouting the same oral philsophies that they keep telling you are harmful to deaf children. You give no credit to their experience. Its all about you. So if you can't handle the dissention you get here, go where they agree with you.

:gpost::gpost::gpost::gpost::gpost:
 
If you are talking about my post referring to upper classmen....this was inregard to notetakers, not interpreters. It is an entirely differnent situation, and if you knew anything about the provision of accommodations, you never would have assumed that the upper classman was functioning as a terp.

Actually I was not referring to your post. So in your view it is acceptable for an uppercallsman to act as a notetaker but not as an interpreter. What happens if the notetaker begins interpreting for the student, that would be improper, don't you agree?
 
Hey, jackie, I've got an idea. If you want to ber around a group of people who agree with you, go hand out with the oralists. You brought yourself into a deaf forum,

Since the name of this forum is alldeaf and the oral deaf are part of the deaf community, Jackie is in the proper place. As for the rest of your post, just your usual delusional rantings and ravings.
 
Yes, jackie, and this is a very young, very new student whohas no idea what he is talking about. He needs to stay in school and have quite a bit more exposure to the DEaf community. The fact that he even applied the word "audist" to me tell s me that he is very new in his education. LIkewise, his only exposure to the Deaf community has been in his very new classes.

He is enthusiastic, and he is idealistic, but he is also very unrealistic and naive. And you certianly haven't won any points with the deaf community by posting his comments here. He has had one intro psych course and fancies himself qualified to speak on the psychological aspects of deafness.

He is taking some ASl classes, and fancies himself an expert on the Deaf.

He was homeschooled and considers himself expert on the subject of the public school system.

He stated early on in the discussion that he was an interpreter. Then later on, he backs down and admits that he has just begun intrpreter training.

He thought you were a single mother.

He didn't not realize that gpa was a grade point average of all of a students's grades. He doesn't know the difference, despite numerous explanations, of the difference between interpretation and transcription.

Sorry, girl, but you haven't increased your credibility one iota. If you want to add credence to your argument, I'd start quoting people a bit more qualified than an adolescent terp in training

Please, jackie, get off the Jillio is picking on me. The fact of the matter is, the person who have jsut quoted is the only one that supports you. Want me to point out some of the other posters that think you are ridiculas?


I read some of this person's posts and I hope he does stay in school for he has the makings of a fine lawyer. The legal analysis he stated in some of his posts is right on point.

If you had been able to comprehend his posts you would have understood that he was not calling you an "audist", what he said was:

"The definition of audist is a person who thinks themselves better based on hearing status. You portray in your posts a person who thinks manually raised or operating Deaf are superiorly raised to orally raised. You may not think you do, but that is the picture I have made of you over time."

He very adeptly took your argument and crammed it back down your throat! Bravo!

However, the most telling comment he made as to why he has a bright future ahead of him is this:

"I don't debate with people who want to argue with me if I say the sky is blue."
 
Actually I was not referring to your post. So in your view it is acceptable for an uppercallsman to act as a notetaker but not as an interpreter. What happens if the notetaker begins interpreting for the student, that would be improper, don't you agree?

My notetakers undergo training, and know what the boundaries are. There is no need for a ntoetaker to function as an interpreter. All of my deaf students are supplied with both. And if the student is oral.....no terp.
 
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