HOW I SEE IT: Note, the word Deaf is to be capitalized

Miss-Delectable

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HOW I SEE IT: Note, the word Deaf is to be capitalized | Star-Exponent

In public, being stared at while chatting in gesture or American Sign Language is old news. Why is it more intense lately?

Perhaps "Switched at Birth" shown on ABC Family channel is the cause?

If you haven't seen this, the plot is about two 16-year old girls who were switched at birth.

One is Deaf and the other is hearing - the families meet and conflicts inevitably arise.

It's nice that the general awareness is being cultivated: cochlear implants aren't always wanted nor do they work for everyone and more importantly - showing Deaf people as a cultural and linguistic group rather than an isolated hearing impaired individuals.

Yet it's troubling that the Deaf girl, Daphne, is shown to possess unrealistic lip reading ability. Ac-cording to the experts, English is 35% visible on the lips.

Researcher Albert Mehrabian's 1960 work suggested that 60 to 70 percent of spoken language is actually derived from body cues.

Writing and gesturing is how Deaf people chat with non-signers yet not one Deaf characters has ex-change notes with non-signers.

One episode seems to imply hearing people are never in danger of kitchen fires or car accidents. Factoid: Deaf people have greater peripheral vision.

Currently 85% of Deaf children attend a hearing school with some services.

What the show implied but wasn't directly addressed is the fact that any time a Deaf child is in a non-signing environment, he/she is in the most restrictive environment.

If the child is in an 'oral only' program then the amount of information he/she gets is limited.

Hearing babies' intelligence is heightened by the use of ASL/Baby signs. Deaf babies are denied this same opportunity.

Their parents are told by most audiologists, doctors and other invested experts NOT to sign to their deaf baby.

This mindset is as ironic as it is moronic.

The show also doesn't address the alarming statistics of Deaf children being raised in an oral-only method are failing by the time they arrive to middle school/high school.

(Years ago Deaf children were educated in a full signing environment and were academically on par with their hearing peers.

But then things changed in 1880, almost all the Deaf teachers were fired, and Deaf education was taught orally.)

Generalities and unrealistic lip reading skills aside, 'Switched at Birth' is beneficial in showing the general public that Deaf people are just like anyone else.

We use our eyes instead of our ears and many of us wouldn't change that for all the money in the world.
 
The show also doesn't address the alarming statistics of Deaf children being raised in an oral-only method are failing by the time they arrive to middle school/high school.
Can someone give me a cite for that? Again, if this is true, that is one reason I dislike the oral only approach. It seems to assume that kids just need specialized oral preschool, and then they'll be on par for life.
Also, if this is true, then how come Clarke isn't getting lots and lots of referrals for their middle school program?
 
Hearing babies' intelligence is heightened by the use of ASL/Baby signs. Deaf babies are denied this same opportunity.

Their parents are told by most audiologists, doctors and other invested experts NOT to sign to their deaf baby.

What is the logic behind this? I just don't understand why parents would think this way. Parents adopt from foreign countries and they do what they can to understand the kid's culture and language. Why do not parents do the same for deaf/HOH children? It makes me very mad, I think I read the statistic that only 23% of parents of deaf children learn ASL. What is the logic behind isolating the kid?
 
Can someone give me a cite for that? Again, if this is true, that is one reason I dislike the oral only approach. It seems to assume that kids just need specialized oral preschool, and then they'll be on par for life.
Also, if this is true, then how come Clarke isn't getting lots and lots of referrals for their middle school program?

That's what I'd like to know too.
 
Wirelessly posted

deafdyke said:
The show also doesn't address the alarming statistics of Deaf children being raised in an oral-only method are failing by the time they arrive to middle school/high school.
Can someone give me a cite for that? Again, if this is true, that is one reason I dislike the oral only approach. It seems to assume that kids just need specialized oral preschool, and then they'll be on par for life.
Also, if this is true, then how come Clarke isn't getting lots and lots of referrals for their middle school program?

most private oral schools don't go beyond kindergarten or 1st grade any more because it isn't needed. Even the ones that go higher end by 8th grade. If there was this huge problem, wouldn't they still have enrollments justifying higher grades?
 
Sheesh... Each time I read Deaf news, I see someone is always there and, he tried to paint the whole Deaf community. Good grief...

:roll:
 
Wirelessly posted



most private oral schools don't go beyond kindergarten or 1st grade any more because it isn't needed. Even the ones that go higher end by 8th grade. If there was this huge problem, wouldn't they still have enrollments justifying higher grades?

Um faire joure, were you aware that the reason that Clarke/CID/St. Josephs etc had preschool-8th grade enrollement, until recently wasn't b/c it took so long for kids to master speech. It was b/c a lot of kids started doing badly and then they transferred to Clarke/CID/St. Josephs for middle school.
They are doing better, but they're doing better in that they don't desperately NEED a private oral school placement. Many of them still require public oral school placements. Either that, or they're being transferred to the state schools, which are a lot more oral deaf/hoh friendly then they were in the old days.
 
Then why is it when people talk White or Black people the 'B' or 'W' is not capitalized!
 
Then why is it when people talk White or Black people the 'B' or 'W' is not capitalized!

I think it is because it is to disinginguish the difference between deaf people who are not culturally deaf from those who are.
 
Either that, or they're being transferred to the state schools, which are a lot more oral deaf/hoh friendly then they were in the old days.
Quoting myself.........isn't that right shel and bajagirl? The thing is....back in the old days, the state Deaf Schools were generally for the oral failures or kids who weren't being served well in the mainstream. Now it's kids who weren't being served well in the mainstream....and that's oral and sign kids. Sadly the Deaf School tends not to be the first educational choice for even kids who are voice off.
 
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