Gallaudet reflects changes in deaf culture

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Nation & World | Gallaudet reflects changes in deaf culture | Seattle Times Newspaper

The quiet campus of Gallaudet University here was always a place where students could speak the unspoken language of deaf America and be understood.

That is no longer so true. For the first time in living memory, significant numbers of freshmen at the nation's premiere university for the deaf and hard of hearing arrive lacking proficiency in American Sign Language and experience with deaf culture.

Rising numbers of Gallaudet students are products of a hearing world. The share of undergraduates who come from mainstream public schools rather than residential schools for the deaf has grown from 33 percent to 44 percent in four years. The number of students with cochlear implants, which stimulate the auditory nerve to create a sense of sound, has doubled to 102 since 2005.

Gallaudet also is enrolling more hearing students in programs to train sign-language interpreters and teachers. Together, the changes are redefining a school at the epicenter of American deaf society.

A new generation of deaf and hard-of-hearing children can study where they please. Changes in federal law have rerouted deaf students from residential schools for the deaf to mainstream public campuses, which are now obliged to serve them. Cochlear implants are gaining acceptance and changing the nature of deafness, although the deaf community remains divided on their use.

The influx of "non-signers," who can hear and speak or who read lips or text, may be necessary for Gallaudet's survival. Yet it has sparked passionate debate on whether the university is becoming "hearing-ized" and whether deaf culture is slipping away.

"We want a signing environment, because how often do deaf students get that environment?" said Dylan Hinks, 20, student body president. "This is the place where I want to have comfort and ease in my communication."

Protests, problems

There was talk of a vanishing deaf culture at Gallaudet five years ago, when protesters shut down the campus over the appointment of then-Provost Jane Fernandes as president. More than 100 demonstrators were arrested. Trustees eventually revoked the appointment.

The consensus on campus today is that the protest centered on the propriety of the presidential search. Protesters said outgoing President King Jordan hijacked the proceedings to elevate Fernandes, his protégé.

But Fernandes portrayed herself as a casualty in a deaf-culture war. Born deaf, Fernandes grew up speaking English and learned to sign as an adult. She claimed that, to students advocating the primacy of sign language, she was "not deaf enough."

Fernandes now serves as provost of the University of North Carolina, Asheville. In an email interview, she said, "There remains entrenched at Gallaudet a strong deaf culture that perpetuates a very narrow way to live as a deaf person."

One year during her tenure as Gallaudet provost, Fernandes said, upper-level students hazed freshmen, ordering them not to speak in any of their classes so that they were forced to sign.

"I had freshmen in tears, telling me that Gallaudet recruited them under false pretenses, because they were told Gallaudet welcomed all deaf students," she said.

After Fernandes' ouster, accreditors from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education put Gallaudet on probation. The censure dealt a stunning blow to Gallaudet's academic currency. Some feared the school would close.

Accreditors found academic standards virtually nonexistent. The university admitted students who could not graduate and employed professors who could barely sign. The institution was not keeping pace with the changing deaf world. Undergraduate enrollment had slipped from 1,274 in fall 2005 to 1,040 in 2007.

A bilingual vision

The Gallaudet of today scarcely resembles that fractured campus.

President Alan Hurwitz, recruited away from a rival deaf school within New York's Rochester Institute of Technology, has raised standards and largely united Gallaudet around a new vision of bilingual deaf education.

"People are beginning to realize that American Sign Language is a value added," said Hurwitz, deaf since birth and a fluent signer.

Twenty months into his administration, there is little to protest.

Gallaudet's graduation rate has risen from 25 percent to 41 percent in four years. The share of graduates who continue their education has nearly doubled, to 63 percent. The school has raised admission requirements, and average ACT reading scores for entering freshmen are at their highest point in recent history. Undergraduate enrollment has rebounded to 1,118.

Hurwitz has calmed the culture wars with a schoolwide policy that affirms the primacy of sign language but also posits Gallaudet as a bilingual school.

Professors now must prove mastery of sign language to get tenure. Students, too, are expected to sign. In a campuswide email last fall, Hurwitz wrote: "Everyone on campus — no matter his or her signing level — should make every effort to communicate in sign language when in public areas on campus."

But upholding that standard is increasingly difficult on a campus where nearly half of the freshmen now come from mainstream high schools and dozens arrive not knowing how to sign. University leaders last year created a six-week crash course for 46 new signers, an orientation to Gallaudet and to the deaf world.
 
I know it did happen, and see why they chose gallaudet in the first place. Ohwell.
 
Ok, so they're painting it like this is a new thing. Res school as a feeder for Gally hasn't been the norm for DECADES.....and for crying out loud there were always kids who went to Gally from CID, and other oral schools.
 
Diversity at its finest.

I do think they should at least have ASL assigned as a Pre Req.

Many colleges have an entry level or require some type of Foriegn language. ASL should be required for GU.
 
Diversity at its finest.

I do think they should at least have ASL assigned as a Pre Req.

Many colleges have an entry level or require some type of Foriegn language. ASL should be required for GU.

Gallaudet University does require fluent in ASL so all students are required to take GSR 103 that based on ASL, even GSR 102 does involve much of ASL, along with written English.

New signers are required to pass ASL 101 and ASL 102 before taking GSR 103.

GSR = General Studies Requirement
 
One year during her tenure as Gallaudet provost, Fernandes said, upper-level students hazed freshmen, ordering them not to speak in any of their classes so that they were forced to sign.

"I had freshmen in tears, telling me that Gallaudet recruited them under false pretenses, because they were told Gallaudet welcomed all deaf students," she said.

It is a COMPLETE lie. I already talked to my friends who went there and it never happened.

But Fernandes portrayed herself as a casualty in a deaf-culture war. Born deaf, Fernandes grew up speaking English and learned to sign as an adult. She claimed that, to students advocating the primacy of sign language, she was "not deaf enough."

Again, it is completely BS. She used it to take advantage of MSM's unsurprising naivety on Deafness in order to have them reflect blame on students and faculty. The real problems are her horrific management and leadership skills. She did practice MBI (Management By Intimidation) against the faculty and students during her tenure as Provost.

After Fernandes' ouster, accreditors from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education put Gallaudet on probation. The censure dealt a stunning blow to Gallaudet's academic currency. Some feared the school would close.

Accreditors found academic standards virtually nonexistent. The university admitted students who could not graduate and employed professors who could barely sign. The institution was not keeping pace with the changing deaf world. Undergraduate enrollment had slipped from 1,274 in fall 2005 to 1,040 in 2007.

Who are to blame for those academic deficiencies?

King Jordan and Jane Fernandes!
 
Why are people still listening to Jane Fernandes?
 
It is a COMPLETE lie. I already talked to my friends who went there and it never happened.



Again, it is completely BS. She used it to take advantage of MSM's unsurprising naivety on Deafness in order to have them reflect blame on students and faculty. The real problems are her horrific management and leadership skills. She did practice MBI (Management By Intimidation) against the faculty and students during her tenure as Provost.



Who are to blame for those academic deficiencies?

King Jordan and Jane Fernandes!

:gpost:

Jane Fernandes is full of shit!
 
Diversity at its finest.

I do think they should at least have ASL assigned as a Pre Req.

Many colleges have an entry level or require some type of Foriegn language. ASL should be required for GU.

What I would like to see is instead of oral only being the be all and end all, is push ASL as a second language for kids who are orally sucessful. Yes, a lot more kids can pick up spoken language abilty and don't need the intensity of a P-8 education a la Clarke...but that shouldn't mean that should be the only tool they have.
 
I wondered why the oral kids want to go to Gally when they don't know ASL and how did they heard of it in the first place.
 
It is a COMPLETE lie. I already talked to my friends who went there and it never happened.

I don't know much about Gally, but hazing takes place on almost every campus in the country. I would be shocked if this DIDN'T happen at Gally.
 
I wondered why the oral kids want to go to Gally when they don't know ASL and how did they heard of it in the first place.

When I was a senior in high school, a recruit from Gallaudet, visited our HI (hearing impaired) class which constited the 5 of us to tell us about Gallaudet University. I was shocked that there was an actual deaf university and immediately, I was turned off. Besides I was working my butt off to impress the state university scouts to get softball scholarships offered so my interest wasnt there. My best friend balked at the idea of moving away from her family as she grew up very sheltered. The other 3 werent seniors yet so they werent paying attention.

It is possible that Gallaudet recruits do visit deaf children who are mainstreamed and oral as it did happened to me in 1990.
 
I don't know much about Gally, but hazing takes place on almost every campus in the country. I would be shocked if this DIDN'T happen at Gally.

It didn't happen in large group but it did happen in very small group because some students are just stupid.

My friend had incident about being teased due to new signer at cafeteria but students whoever teased him was second year, not upper class.
 
I wondered why the oral kids want to go to Gally when they don't know ASL and how did they heard of it in the first place.

Hello,, when the Deaf Oral schools were booming, a lot of kids ended up at Gally....Also, they have a booth at the Clarke School Mainstream conference.
I think too that they WANT to learn ASL. It's not nessarily their fault they didn't get to learn ASL early on. A lot of hearing parents are uninformed that even hoh kids can attend schools or programs for the deaf.
 
I don't know much about Gally, but hazing takes place on almost every campus in the country. I would be shocked if this DIDN'T happen at Gally.

She was talking about the hazing that the upperclassmen imposing on froshies over their lack of ASL skills. I know it never had happened and Foxrac seems to confirm it.

I talked to many of my Gally friends about this and all of them said it never happened.
 
I am sorry if I bump this thread. After I talked to Betty about Gally, I feel kinda disappoint about someone discouraged her to not go to Gallaudet because parties, drug addicts, and a lot of ASL users. So, I showed this thread to Betty.

But, it is not first time, I discussed some friends of mine and they all said the same thing, too. But, I know I have another some friends are strongly opposed or hated Gally and they're mostly NITD/RIT students (or another Deaf college). So I wonder, how do I respond to those claims? I know they'll scold me for being "wrong", just like they claimed hearing don't have dramas because the hearing world is "so much better" than Deaf world a while ago. They told me that I am "wrong" and don't have enough experience of hearing world. Ugh.
 
I am sorry if I bump this thread. After I talked to Betty about Gally, I feel kinda disappoint about someone discouraged her to not go to Gallaudet because parties, drug addicts, and a lot of ASL users. So, I showed this thread to Betty.

But, it is not first time, I discussed some friends of mine and they all said the same thing, too. But, I know I have another some friends are strongly opposed or hated Gally and they're mostly NITD/RIT students (or another Deaf college). So I wonder, how do I respond to those claims? I know they'll scold me for being "wrong", just like they claimed hearing don't have dramas because the hearing world is "so much better" than Deaf world a while ago. They told me that I am "wrong" and don't have enough experience of hearing world. Ugh.

I went to NTID instead of Gallaudet because I want hands-on classes instead of liberal classes.

I would have to disagree with the hearing world being so much better. I have seen the "N.I.D." graffiti for "National Institution for the Deaf". "Nice" of them!

Maybe they are talking about deaf people tend to gossip/backstabbing other deaf people. Guess what, I'd bet that hearing people do gossip/backstab others but you don't know because they talk too fast.
 
She was talking about the hazing that the upperclassmen imposing on froshies over their lack of ASL skills. I know it never had happened and Foxrac seems to confirm it.

I talked to many of my Gally friends about this and all of them said it never happened.

Might want to look up Charles Wirick.
 
I am sorry if I bump this thread. After I talked to Betty about Gally, I feel kinda disappoint about someone discouraged her to not go to Gallaudet because parties, drug addicts, and a lot of ASL users. So, I showed this thread to Betty.

But, it is not first time, I discussed some friends of mine and they all said the same thing, too. But, I know I have another some friends are strongly opposed or hated Gally and they're mostly NITD/RIT students (or another Deaf college). So I wonder, how do I respond to those claims? I know they'll scold me for being "wrong", just like they claimed hearing don't have dramas because the hearing world is "so much better" than Deaf world a while ago. They told me that I am "wrong" and don't have enough experience of hearing world. Ugh.

You get all the hearing people drama on the news. Tell them that's their hearing world drama.
 
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