I'm a homeschool graduate and am currently training to be a sign langauge interpreter. Once I'm a qualified interpreter I'd love to be able to volunteer some time making homeschooling events accessable to the Deaf.
I've done some checking and have found very few homeschool Deaf families. I know one family with Deaf parents who homeschool their hearing children, and send the Deaf kids to residential school, and this weekend I met one family with Deaf parents who homeschool both their Deaf and hearing children.
I'm curious if the few numbers of Deaf homeschoolers is simply because people have chosen other schooling options, or if it's because there is a lack of interpreting and networking in that area?
I've done some checking and have found very few homeschool Deaf families. I know one family with Deaf parents who homeschool their hearing children, and send the Deaf kids to residential school, and this weekend I met one family with Deaf parents who homeschool both their Deaf and hearing children.
I'm curious if the few numbers of Deaf homeschoolers is simply because people have chosen other schooling options, or if it's because there is a lack of interpreting and networking in that area?