metalangel
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- Feb 20, 2012
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Hello,
I posted a intro message in the other part of the forum, but I wanted to see if the experienced interpreters and others who work with ASL professionally could give me some feedback on what I'm thinking of doing.
Apology in advance for the length but I'm in a somewhat unusual position: 32 year old Canadian living in the UK since age 18, disenchanted with both work and the country. I attended a high school with a large deaf/HoH department so was aware of Deaf culture but nothing more, got to know some of the students who talked as well as signed and so participated in classes outside the HoH department. All our assemblies and events would have interpreters present.
I have a BA Hons in Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies but since getting that I've worked mostly customer service and IT-related jobs, the last six I've worked in the railway industry doing administrative stuff.
I am considering retrained as a means of returning to Canada with my British partner and am seriously looking at either working in an ASL school as a teaching assistant or being an interpreter. I am sorry, I don't have a better reason to give for the renewal of my interest in signing, but learning basic ASL with my partner has been fun and I've understood the language and taken to it much faster than I did with, say, French when I was in third grade. I don't want to grind away at an office job for the next 30 years, I want to do something more meaningful and productive that is useful to others.
The problem for me is that there are no (or practically no) ASL courses or ASL Deaf clubs in the UK to let me acquire the necessary training and fluency, I'll have to do it in Canada, which means leaving my job, moving back and becoming a mature student. Because I've had no formal training I'd have to do the 1 year ASL/Deaf studies course before I could do the 3 year Interpreter course.
I've tried to read as much as I can about what this is like as a career, and some of the threads here have been very helpful, others (like this) eye-opening.
What I need to know is:
-is this feasible? I have my savings but I'll need to take a part time job to keep us going, will I be completely burnt out?
-once you've graduated as a terp, how hard is it to get underway bringing in enough money as a freelancer?
-I've read that some people have trouble/don't want to interpret because of ethical dilemmas. Part of why I didn't pursue journalism was that I've got empathy to spare along with a conscience - I couldn't be a sleazy tabloid reporter, I want to do what's right. Would that same desire interfere with interpreting?
-should I look at doing just the ASL/Deaf studies first, and then consider moving to doing the terp stuff later once I've had a chance to both get a job (perhaps in a social work setting) and also some involvement in the Deaf Community to further increase my vocabulary and fluency with real world experience? If so, does anyone have any experience of doing those jobs?
Please let me know anything you think that would be helpful, good and bad, it's all important to me. It's a big decision and very stressful for us.
(thank you for reading my wall of text too)
I posted a intro message in the other part of the forum, but I wanted to see if the experienced interpreters and others who work with ASL professionally could give me some feedback on what I'm thinking of doing.
Apology in advance for the length but I'm in a somewhat unusual position: 32 year old Canadian living in the UK since age 18, disenchanted with both work and the country. I attended a high school with a large deaf/HoH department so was aware of Deaf culture but nothing more, got to know some of the students who talked as well as signed and so participated in classes outside the HoH department. All our assemblies and events would have interpreters present.
I have a BA Hons in Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies but since getting that I've worked mostly customer service and IT-related jobs, the last six I've worked in the railway industry doing administrative stuff.
I am considering retrained as a means of returning to Canada with my British partner and am seriously looking at either working in an ASL school as a teaching assistant or being an interpreter. I am sorry, I don't have a better reason to give for the renewal of my interest in signing, but learning basic ASL with my partner has been fun and I've understood the language and taken to it much faster than I did with, say, French when I was in third grade. I don't want to grind away at an office job for the next 30 years, I want to do something more meaningful and productive that is useful to others.
The problem for me is that there are no (or practically no) ASL courses or ASL Deaf clubs in the UK to let me acquire the necessary training and fluency, I'll have to do it in Canada, which means leaving my job, moving back and becoming a mature student. Because I've had no formal training I'd have to do the 1 year ASL/Deaf studies course before I could do the 3 year Interpreter course.
I've tried to read as much as I can about what this is like as a career, and some of the threads here have been very helpful, others (like this) eye-opening.
What I need to know is:
-is this feasible? I have my savings but I'll need to take a part time job to keep us going, will I be completely burnt out?
-once you've graduated as a terp, how hard is it to get underway bringing in enough money as a freelancer?
-I've read that some people have trouble/don't want to interpret because of ethical dilemmas. Part of why I didn't pursue journalism was that I've got empathy to spare along with a conscience - I couldn't be a sleazy tabloid reporter, I want to do what's right. Would that same desire interfere with interpreting?
-should I look at doing just the ASL/Deaf studies first, and then consider moving to doing the terp stuff later once I've had a chance to both get a job (perhaps in a social work setting) and also some involvement in the Deaf Community to further increase my vocabulary and fluency with real world experience? If so, does anyone have any experience of doing those jobs?
Please let me know anything you think that would be helpful, good and bad, it's all important to me. It's a big decision and very stressful for us.
(thank you for reading my wall of text too)