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#61 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
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Quote:
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~Shel~
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#62 (permalink) | |
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Weapon of Mass Percussion
Join Date: Feb 2006
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This explains well the importance of English literacy.
Source: Options in Deaf Education-History, Methodologies, and Strategies for Surviving the System Quote:
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#63 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 1,000
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It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem. - Gilbert Chesterton |
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#66 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2006
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I have said this before and am repeating in here.... the hearing people are all set if they lose their hearing for any reason. They won't lose friends when that happened. They would be able to understand everything eventhough they can't hear anymore. This is benefical to them in a big way. Why can't they see that? Speech might be the most efficient to you but it is not to me. How the heck the student can learn anything by watching the teacher's lips? The student is not going to get 100% of what was being said. Family talked almost at once so I get lost and feel left out. How about work? I get lost in team meetings. Do I feel I am getting a fair shake? No. See what I mean? Why do I have to do all the work while they sit back and do nothing and maybe giving me a hard time. I am pretty sure that if everybody know sign language (like Martha's Vineyard) I would be much happier than I am now. The richest man in the Martha's Vineyard when everybody know sign language, happened to be a deaf man. To me, this is a proof beyond all doubt that sign language is the best thing for a deaf person.
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It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem. - Gilbert Chesterton |
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#67 (permalink) | |
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Weapon of Mass Percussion
Join Date: Feb 2006
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#68 (permalink) | |
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Join Date: Oct 2006
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If I had to start over, I would rather be send to a school that offers Bi-Bi education. As for the speech, I would rather work with a machine than a therapist. I can sense the impatience from the therapist.
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It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem. - Gilbert Chesterton |
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#69 (permalink) | |
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Premium Member
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Location: Ohio
Posts: 19,628
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I thought we mostly agree for deaf children to gain full communcation access to give deaf children the oppurtunity to meet and interact all people of the people (deafs and hearings). What good would it do for deaf children if ASL alone is use and not speech at the same time? Will there again be some communcation barries between the deafs and hearings? You got to remember Hun, 90 percent of deaf children are born to hearing parents, they will not allow their deaf child to rely soley on signs and not spoken language, they will not want to limited their child's option in their world that is different from ours. We do not want deaf children go on suffering as usual if we limited their communcation access. Too often children were restricted from learning signs do we want to restricted them from speech? They are not going to move forward instead they will be moving backwards just as it always been ASL versus spoken speech. The whole idea with bi bi program is to use signs to teach those deaf children how to read and write English. That sounds as biased as the AGBell organization. Whatever happens to all forms of communication? I'm all for equal education for the deaf (signs and speech together) I know both sides of the coin. Many professials seem to have a one size fits all metality when it comes to education for the deaf children I don't need to hear this from deaf adults either. The truth is they're hurting the deaf children by limiting their toolbox appoaches. ASL is a great visual body language communcation for the deafs to the deafs But, speech, spoken language and lip reading is a great visual communcation for the deafs to the hearings. Is that the whole point of putting deaf children in both worlds instead of one? This bi bi program supports the deaf culture where they share the same language, experiences and values where does this leave for the hearing world? So this is why I don't think this program is more appopriate education for deaf student unless you can come up with a better respond when is speech is taught and how often? (If I've made some spelling errors, sorry!! I'm on sidekick it's hard to read my whole post when typing with thumbs)
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#70 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
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Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 11,365
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Quote:
Using both at the same time would be like using Spanish and English at the same time. U just cannot mix two languages together like that. If my brother was put in a program where the teachers were switching from ASL to spoken language while teaching, he would definitely miss out on a lot of education. The public schools teachers dont switch from Spanish and English while teaching. If there is a Spanish-based instruction, those who understand it are grouped together. That's what the BiBi programs do. I work in one so I know how it works. I dont know what other programs u did your research on but as far as I know, all of them have speech/spoken language programs too.
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~Shel~
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#71 (permalink) | ||
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Premium Member
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Location: Ohio
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#72 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
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Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 11,365
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Quote:
U can disagree with the BiBi program ..that's your right. As a teacher who has been in the field for 5 plus years, I have seen TC, BiBi and oral programs and I see that the BiBi approach is working the most effectively if the goal is to teach deaf children using the same curriculm as the public schhols use. It is all about giving our deaf students equal access to what hearing children learn. For me, their education comes first and I will use what works the best for ALL. Using both languages in my classroom won't work for 3 of my students but will work for one. It wouldn't be fair for my 3 who have no auditory nor speech skills. Heck, even me who has excellent oral skills wouldn't benefit either cuz I would miss out too much on what is being taught. I can't do that to my students' learning process...what happened an hour ago proved that it disrupted their learning process. Wish it wud work for all but it is not that simple. If u really want to see how it works, then I suggest try working in a classroom in all kinds of programs. Being a teacher is not easy especially when using 2 languages. I wud love to work in a CS program as a volunteer to see how it really works. Reading it on paper is not the same as actually seeing it in action. Iam just giving u my experience as a teacher and what I have seen. U don't have to agree with me.
__________________
~Shel~
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#73 (permalink) | |
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Join Date: Feb 2006
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#74 (permalink) | |
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Weapon of Mass Percussion
Join Date: Feb 2006
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#75 (permalink) | |
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Weapon of Mass Percussion
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#76 (permalink) |
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So ready for Springtime!
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I want to add...we take the kids on field trips out in the hearing world. We just took them to a play that used spoken language (yes terps were provided cuz not all deaf children are able to catch everything being said..heck, I can't either!). So, how r we just limiting them to the Deaf world only?
The definition of bi means two so we offer BOTH..asl and english, deaf and hearing worlds. Maybe it is me, but I don't see one thing wrong with the BiBi approach. As for using both speech and signing while teaching, it creates a confusing learning environment for the students especially those who don't have any speech skills. That to me is not a healthy educational environment and will frustrate the kids even more. The last thing we want is to frustrate them even more and have them become discouraged from learning. The curriculm is hard enough for all kids even hearing kids. No need to make it even more difficult for deaf kids. I don't see the point of it. If others think speech is so important in the classroom, your choice but for me, education and learning is the most important of all. I want these kids to graduate with so much knowledge, be able to utilize critical thinking skills, develop problem solving skills, and so much more.
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~Shel~
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#77 (permalink) | ||||
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Weapon of Mass Percussion
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#78 (permalink) | |
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So ready for Springtime!
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Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 11,365
Blog Entries: 1
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Quote:
Why teach using a language that they don't have full access to? I guess the ideal classroom would have having the kids and teacher constantly misundertsanding each other if speech was incorporated to the lessons. I sure wouldn't want that additional stress on the kids. Didn't u read what I said about testing that with my students a few hours ago? Already within 5 mins, their frustration level shot up and they were constantly asking me what did I say or to pls repeat myself. Can u imagine them being in that kind of educational setting 6 hours a day 5 days a week? That will lower the quality of education for them and for me, that is just wrong. I sure wouldn't feel good about myself as a teacher if I didn't ensure that they all have equal access to language and communication. That wud just go against my principles. That is why speech is not in the general curriculm. We r using the public school curriculm so, of course, speech is not designed into it cuz hearing children don't need it hence our speech classes. We have speech classes for all the concerns u have posted. In a perfect word, all deaf kids would aquire speech skills but the fact is just the opposite. I am speechless (not literally) that people think it is ok to use both at the same time during instruction. It doesn't make sense to me to do that to those who have difficulty with their speech and lipreading/listening skills. Using a language that is fully accessible to them makes more sense to me. Pls..have either of u have experienced teaching a classroom full of deaf/hoh kids?can u both become teachers and maybe u both can design a curriculm that all deaf children can successfully learn from using both speech and ASL at the SAME time during instruction. Then I can learn from u. ![]()
__________________
~Shel~
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#79 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
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#80 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 12,580
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