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#1 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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Please help
Hello, I'm a hearing college student working on a thesis project in order to graduate. My topic is deaf job discrimination, and I'm working closely with my ASL professor. It would help me if you guys can answer some of these questions for me out of your own experiences. Thanks so much for your help in advance. I know that this may be a lot of questions, so even if you only feel like answering some of them, it will be a big help for me.
1. What was it like growing up being deaf? 2. Did you go through hard times because you were deaf? 3. What school did you go to? 4. Was your school a mainstream public school or a special school for the deaf? 5. Do you have a job now? 6. What types of jobs did you have before? 7. Do you think that it is harder to earn a good job being deaf? 8. Do you think it is harder to earn a good education being deaf? 9. What places have you lived before? 10. Did you notice any differences between how people treated you in those places? 11. Have you ever been treated badly by a boss or other people you have worked with? |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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#4 (permalink) | |
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Professional Writer.
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1. Very few friends. 2. I accepted myself, it's the other kids that had a problem with it. 3. Public. 4. Mainstream. 5. Yes, I think I still have it. 6. Driving a schoolbus, semi truck, collections, skip tracing. 7. Very. 8. Yes. When I was in hs, the student support services and I fought all the time and that was only for my teacher's aide in learning how to type. I couldn't even get a note taker, so that was out a long time before. 9. Various places around the USA. 10. The places that I've been treated with respect I can count on one hand. The others, no. Bible college was the worst, although I know you didn't ask about college experiences. I'm in a public university now and like it quite well.
__________________
Pete Above Him there is no other . . . John 14:6. |
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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#6 (permalink) |
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Please don't click me! D:
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1. What was it like growing up being deaf?
so quiet 2. Did you go through hard times because you were deaf? early yes, later no 3. What school did you go to? best educaiton, my parents gave me 4. Was your school a mainstream public school or a special school for the deaf? mainstream 5. Do you have a job now? yes 6. What types of jobs did you have before? tough job 7. Do you think that it is harder to earn a good job being deaf? yes 8. Do you think it is harder to earn a good education being deaf? yes 9. What places have you lived before? small town 10. Did you notice any differences between how people treated you in those places? somewhere yes 11. Have you ever been treated badly by a boss or other people you have worked with? quite yes |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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Can anyone comment on what they know about the difference between the north and south and the difference in job opportunities. my deaf friend said that things are better in the north, can anyone agree with this? Thanks guys. Also if someone can maybe describe some reasons why it's hard to get a good education being deaf... language barrier? not enough programs? too much money? thanks. |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Just Here :)
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Replying
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Take care!
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Sun Whorshipper
![]() Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 16,119
Blog Entries: 1
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~Shel~ ![]() "A child educated only at school is an uneducated child." -George Santayana |
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#12 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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First of all I want to thank everyone that has commented so far.
Second, I see that my thread has been moved from the ADA section. This is appropriate, and I'm sorry for placing in the wrong place first. I had thought the discussion may consist of ADA related stuff but it ended up not... Third, I have now heard people say that it is harder to get a good education being deaf and others have said it is not any harder getting an education being deaf. Can you guys please let me know what you think about this? I ask because in my paper I say how many deaf may not get a good education, contributing to possible job discrimination later on. Your thoughts? And again email me at mjk0886@gmail.com or even IM me on AIM my screen name is competes2win, so contact me if you don't feel comfortable speaking on the forum. Thanks. |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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HTH |
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#14 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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@ AniJ : Thanks for the very thorough reply to my questions. Very helpful.
Great that you were able to compare the USA and Canada a bit, that's interesting. Also many of your answers seemed to confirm a lot of my beliefs and predictions that perhaps a lot of the discrimination that exists could be combated against simply by educating hearing people better about things such as a Deaf/hoh person's abilities. On the other hand I also think its a good idea to educate the deaf as well, because I've been hearing accounts of the Deaf people not knowing the possible programs/services available to them. |
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#15 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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I was unsure of what services were available to me until the Disability Service dept told me! In fact if I had of known I probably would have gone back to university/college MUCH sooner !! (when I was at college in the USA I didn't get any support services) |
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#16 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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#17 (permalink) |
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Registered User
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I'm "just one of the students" nothing different than the hearing students when it comes to "how I attend class". I elect to voice for myself in class - unless I'm struggling with a concept I understand better in ASL ... then they will jump in and voice for me. It is assumed that if I am signing ... it is to my interpreters (and not to be voiced to the class) UNLESS I begin my signed statement with something like "VOICE FOR-ME PLEASE"....)
My interpreters ( I have 2 per class who trade off ever 20mins) sit/stand either right by the teacher, or if we're in a circle they sit so I can see them face on. The exact set up depends on how the seating is. P=Prof, T= Terp, S= Student, M=Me seating.JPG The set up is identical if I was Hoh, or R&L profoundly deaf. The only thing that would be different is that I use my hearing to pick up some of what the Prof is saying as well ... so I take that into account when picking seats. Something that might be of interest to you is that sometimes I pick seats that are the WORST for my hearing and turn my HA off (which puts me well out of voice range hearing wise) ~ this is the case for teachers with accents that I struggle with ... turning "off" allows me to eliminate all the sound and focus on my interpreters. I tell my 'terps if I'm going "off" so they know that I might need additional interpretation of sounds, and if I'm going to speak that they should tell me if I need to raise or lower my voice to be heard - we flip back and forth very easily though. HTH ! Last edited by Anij; 02-24-2008 at 07:07 PM. |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Hooray its November!
![]() Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 4,199
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2. somewhat - but nothing traumatic. I mean yeah I got picked on for not being able to hear and being 'dumb' because I wasnt getting the same information everyone else was. 3. I went to a public school 4. I went to a mainstream public school K-12. 5. Yes I have a job now. 6. Ive had all sorts of jobs- I worked for the local newspaper, worked in food service, janitorial jobs, and currently factory work. 7. yes because once you tell them that you are deaf or HOH then they dont take you as seriously sometimes. 8. yes because you have to ask for accomodations some schools are good about it and others are not, which is bad even though there is a federal law that gaurantees us access to a fair and decent education. Some educators will dumb down the material for you to the point that your'e really not learning anything, and some will simply not take you seriously thinking you'll just miss the information anyway and eventually drop out. 9. Ive lived in dormitories, trailers, on my own, and currently with my parents due to a lack of money to make it on my own at present despite a factory job. 10. yeah - my parents were like lock everything down super tight when your alone because you can't hear, or they have the neighbors constantly driving by making sure your'e still alive. Sometimes the neighbors shy away from you completely because you are deaf, almost like they might contract deafness like its a bad thing or whatnot. 11. yes - I had a boss constantly on my tail because I couldnt hear. Finally I just had enough and quit on the spot. |
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#19 (permalink) | |
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Jasmine's Tiger "Lilly"
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#20 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 15
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My project is nearing it's completion. I have a question though for all who responded... Would you allow me to cite chosen quotes from your responses? I will cite using your screennames, as well as by providing a link to this thread, your privacy will remain.
If any of you who responded to my initial question please let me know that would be great. Thanks. |
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