Miss-Delectable
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- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
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Just wondering. And please, please do not hijack this thread or generate a controversy.
I met a woman, who's a friend of my friend, and she's training to be a teacher of the deaf and told me about how many students in her course, and how many wants to teach in which communication methods.
I found what she told me interesting. But what captured my interest the most was about a middle-aged woman in the course who had a baby grandson who's deaf. He recently had a CI at 8 months, I think.
And she went to meet the CI doctor and he told her not to use sign language at all with her little grandson.
That struck me as unprofessional. If I were a parent, I would have told him to stick that advice to a place where it doesn't shine.
And it irks me to no end that the doctor's biased because he should have known that sign language, in no way, does impede speech or the child's learning.
As far as I'm concerned every parents with a deaf child should have been given information on every communication methods along withs pros and cons, educational info and information on access to classes, support groups and deaf-related assocations etc.
I wonder how we can do something to change this. I know it's a systematic problem, if I said it right.
Face it, many of those so-called neutral (tongue in cheek) professionals are in it for the money that CI creates for further research and to assimilate deaf kids entirely into hearing world.
I reckon it would have been great if we the deaf community could fund a deaf person to go to medical school, in order to become a CI doctor, so he could encourage parents to use the full toolbox approach....
I met a woman, who's a friend of my friend, and she's training to be a teacher of the deaf and told me about how many students in her course, and how many wants to teach in which communication methods.
I found what she told me interesting. But what captured my interest the most was about a middle-aged woman in the course who had a baby grandson who's deaf. He recently had a CI at 8 months, I think.
And she went to meet the CI doctor and he told her not to use sign language at all with her little grandson.
That struck me as unprofessional. If I were a parent, I would have told him to stick that advice to a place where it doesn't shine.
And it irks me to no end that the doctor's biased because he should have known that sign language, in no way, does impede speech or the child's learning.
As far as I'm concerned every parents with a deaf child should have been given information on every communication methods along withs pros and cons, educational info and information on access to classes, support groups and deaf-related assocations etc.
I wonder how we can do something to change this. I know it's a systematic problem, if I said it right.
Face it, many of those so-called neutral (tongue in cheek) professionals are in it for the money that CI creates for further research and to assimilate deaf kids entirely into hearing world.
I reckon it would have been great if we the deaf community could fund a deaf person to go to medical school, in order to become a CI doctor, so he could encourage parents to use the full toolbox approach....