I find they're are just as many clueless deaf parents raising hearing children as there are clueless hearing parents raising deaf children. Ignorance is universal and being deaf doesn't give anyone an edge in child rearing.
My parents went through a lot. I was six when I got my first hearing aid, I didn't get the other until two years later since my parents couldn't afford it. I had speech therapy three times a week one on one and I was sent to Mass Eye and Ear for therapy as well. I was encouraged to wear my hearing aids at school and at home, and I mainstreamed. Living with a disability is never easy, but I graduated school with a M.Ed., and I have a steady income in federal service where I speak as clearly as those that can hear normally. I think my parents did a damn good job, particularly since they had nothing to go on but their own instincts and love for me. There was no Internet then, no support groups, no financial assistance, and thankfully no interaction with a deaf community to encourage my parents to stop teaching me to speak and use sign only. No guilt trips, no bashing that they were robbing me of my identity, etc.
I was raised like any other child and I didn't feel stigmatized or different. Fortunately, I grew up with a heavy dose of my mother's Sicilian culture and I was daily reminded that I was special. All children should be so lucky. It's never fair to generalize any groups, deaf or hearing - being a parent is hard work and just because you can't hear, doesn't mean you understand what a hearing impaired or deaf child is going through better than a hearing parent. All parents are motivated by love...or should be.
Laura