Masaka to educate deaf children

Miss-Delectable

New Member
Joined
Apr 18, 2004
Messages
17,160
Reaction score
7
New Vision Online : Masaka to educate deaf children

MASAKA district, together with Ka Tutandike, a non-governmental organisation, have started a project to sensitise deaf children on reproductive health.

“I was shocked by a young girl who claimed that she was sick after seeing blood coming out of her private parts, not knowing that menstruation was common to everyone,” the district rehabilitation officer, Michael Miiro, told New Vision.

He said the project, which is targeting about 500 deaf children, focuses on teaching sign language to parents, health workers, teachers and members of the community.

Miiro noted that whereas 90% of what children learn is through listening to people talking and the media, the deaf are missing this opportunity.

“Even the teachers in schools where these children go for studies only teach them how to read and write. They don’t know how to deliver reproductive health information to the children,” he said.

“They need television sets, DVDs and video cassette players so that they can see, understand, internalise and later spread the same information to their siblings and those who may not be in position to access that information,” Miiro said.

He expressed concern over parents who hide children with disabilities.

Julius Nkuraija, the Ka Tutandike project manager, said: “We have begun with three schools in Masaka district, including St. Mark VII Bwanda, Good Samaritan School for the Deaf Kitengesa and Masaka School for Children with Special Needs Bugabira.”

He said the project would last three years.
 
This is what wrong with our hearing peers not understanding that we need the education to comprehend on what is going on with the help of sign language and watching the information programs with close captioned. Everything in that article look like they are back into the old ages or dark ages that every hearing parents and teachers tried to hide them from public. We need to have some teaching brochures for the teachers and parents to explain how to communicate with deaf children and teenagers so that they can comprehend what is going on like why the young girl is having period and need to know that it is growing up time.

I remembered when I had my first period, I thought I was going to died. Also I had to show my first pad to my Dad and my mom was embarrassed. I did not know that my first period was for me start growing up. This was new to me at the time. Later, I found out why and I was kind of upset not getting informed about it earlier when it is suppose to be my time for puberty. Geeze. :roll:
 
I thought period was suppose to be red like bleeding. So When I had mine, It looked brown and I thought there was something wrong. I finally told my mom and she say it is my period. There's nothing wrong. I am not sure how many people already knew this but I certainly didn't.
 
Back
Top