Miss-Delectable
New Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 17,160
- Reaction score
- 7
http://www.star.niu.edu/articles/?id=23091
After reading Molly Thurber's article "Who's Your Dream Man (or Greek Goddess)," I was disturbed by the words she used. She referred to Gallaudet as a "hearing-impaired" school. I have a hard-of-hearing girlfriend and I am currently taking COMD 200 and I can safely say that using the phrase "hearing-impaired" is not only wrong, but disrespectful. My girlfriend, and other deaf people I've met, do not consider themselves impaired in any way. It shows the same disrespect as if someone where to refer to a black person as "caucasian-impaired." This type of ignorance is seen in movies when they let us know that the closed caption is for the "hearing-impaired." Hearing people should not be ignorant or scared when talking about deaf people. Refer to them as deaf or hard of hearing, but never hearing-impaired.
Francisco Nava
Sophomore
Political science
After reading Molly Thurber's article "Who's Your Dream Man (or Greek Goddess)," I was disturbed by the words she used. She referred to Gallaudet as a "hearing-impaired" school. I have a hard-of-hearing girlfriend and I am currently taking COMD 200 and I can safely say that using the phrase "hearing-impaired" is not only wrong, but disrespectful. My girlfriend, and other deaf people I've met, do not consider themselves impaired in any way. It shows the same disrespect as if someone where to refer to a black person as "caucasian-impaired." This type of ignorance is seen in movies when they let us know that the closed caption is for the "hearing-impaired." Hearing people should not be ignorant or scared when talking about deaf people. Refer to them as deaf or hard of hearing, but never hearing-impaired.
Francisco Nava
Sophomore
Political science
?
cute.

