Snowball
Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2015
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 7
Hello,
I think I was born to teach and this why I turned to be a writer (when you write your classroom gets bigger). I have a lot of skills to be an effective employee to any companies, but after interviews very few call back and usually they give me jobs where I do not need to hear and where I may interact with none. This situation is frustrating and sometimes I have the impression that being a hard of hearing person or deaf gives the society the right to punish you and to make your goals an attainable dream.
I was looking for adjunct positions at colleges for the deaf. They need you to use ASL, and generally speaking there are no positions in liberal arts and social sciences in the colleges for the deaf (since their philosophy is that deafies should gain a profession). Hence, I turned my attention to colleges for the hearing, and I wanted to ask you if that is possible. In a few words, my question is: may a hard of hearing person teach in a classroom with hearing students?
Thank you!
I think I was born to teach and this why I turned to be a writer (when you write your classroom gets bigger). I have a lot of skills to be an effective employee to any companies, but after interviews very few call back and usually they give me jobs where I do not need to hear and where I may interact with none. This situation is frustrating and sometimes I have the impression that being a hard of hearing person or deaf gives the society the right to punish you and to make your goals an attainable dream.
I was looking for adjunct positions at colleges for the deaf. They need you to use ASL, and generally speaking there are no positions in liberal arts and social sciences in the colleges for the deaf (since their philosophy is that deafies should gain a profession). Hence, I turned my attention to colleges for the hearing, and I wanted to ask you if that is possible. In a few words, my question is: may a hard of hearing person teach in a classroom with hearing students?
Thank you!