Miss-Delectable
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I'm pondering on this question. But I'll talk before posing this ?
I went to school for the deaf, as some of you might know, and observed that only maybe a handful of kids out of 85 students has parents who signed. However, most has little or no interest in their child's progess at school. Teachers found it difficult to get them in for parents-teacher interviews or school council and such.
I know many parents doesn't know how or care about how they can be involved in communication and education for the child. My mother was not one of them, thankfully.
I know Shel90, deafBajagal and few others have put up with this in their work constantly.
So this made me wonder if those parents are apathetic about being committed or interested in reports of their deaf child's progress, has the same apathy with their hearing children's educational progress?
Would be interesting to observe if they expressed more interest in their hearing child's progress than the deaf child.
Leaving you to ponder and debate, if needed.
I went to school for the deaf, as some of you might know, and observed that only maybe a handful of kids out of 85 students has parents who signed. However, most has little or no interest in their child's progess at school. Teachers found it difficult to get them in for parents-teacher interviews or school council and such.
I know many parents doesn't know how or care about how they can be involved in communication and education for the child. My mother was not one of them, thankfully.
I know Shel90, deafBajagal and few others have put up with this in their work constantly.
So this made me wonder if those parents are apathetic about being committed or interested in reports of their deaf child's progress, has the same apathy with their hearing children's educational progress?
Would be interesting to observe if they expressed more interest in their hearing child's progress than the deaf child.
Leaving you to ponder and debate, if needed.

) six years that I've been teaching, I haven't seen a lot of parents who value education in general - regardless if it is for their deaf child or his/her hearing sibling(s). Of course there are countless types of factors that can be mentioned - socioeconomical, cultural, psychological, etc. Bottom line - I feel that many parents (not all, of course - I've worked with some AMAZING parents) just don't give a damn. More than a few seem to view me as a free babysitter, rather than a certified teacher of the deaf. Dr. Ruby Payne wrote a wonderful book about poverty - even though that doesn't sound like it applies to this discussion - it does. In her book (gosh, I think it is something like Understanding the Framework of Poverty (1995ish?) - something like that. Anyways, she talks about different kinds of poverty - which doesn't always mean money. And how poverty can shape the parent's view and value of education.