Hi! From your entry, I am assuming that you are a high school student...right? I would love to hear more about your experience in the "regular" high school--and I really hope that you continue to post here when you are a student at the Deaf school so that we can see things from "an inside view." I am also curious about the oral/ASL/Bi-Bi issue--from what you wrote, I am assuming that your family is oral and hearing and that you were raised orally--is that the case? If so, did you learn ASL through Teachers of the Deaf in mainstream schools? I am trying to see if your experience is anything like my daughter's--hearing family/wears hearing aids and hears well with them/learned to speak by listening with her hearing aids/spoken English is her first language and she LOVES to talk/went to mainstreamed public schools and was the only deaf student for years/now wants to go to school with other deaf teenagers--trying to move to Florida and enroll in FSDB--oh, and she is trying to learn ASL through Teachers of the Deaf so that she can communicate with ALL deaf people(those who speak, those who sign, those who do both).
I hope you will pardon my "wordiness"--I just get a bit excited when I meet another deaf teenager who may be feeling as my daughter is feeling. I have found a lot of information from deaf adults who can look back at their experiences in the past as deaf teenagers, but it is rare to actually communicate with a deaf teen who is currently going through these issues. If there is a way to link my daughter into a "deaf teen message board" I would love to do it--she NEEDS that connection and it is hard to find it!
Oh, and one more question--can you tell us a bit more about your feelings in different situations? Like, you said you prefer Bi-Bi--is that usually "voice off"? Is that when you are successfully communicating with others through ASL only? What about when communicating with other "oral deaf" teens? See, my daughter just wants to make some friends her age, who are deaf and wear hearing aids, and who talk to her. She wants to learn sign to communicate with other deaf people too, but she does NOT want to "turn her voice off" or "give up her voice"--she loves to talk too much!
As far as I can see, FSDB seems to have a "total communication" kind of atmosphere--from what I have learned from this board, that seems very different than a school that is more "Bi-Bi". My daughter would not feel comfortable in a school where there is a lot of pressure to "turn her voice off"--that just is not for her. Can you tell us a bit more about your feelings about Bi-Bi? I am trying to understand--and I am also seeing how very different deaf schools can be regarding communication issues. In other words, some deaf schools would be a good fit for some, but a bad fit for others--and vice versa. How can we compare based solely on the fact that they are "deaf schools"? We need to know their "communication philosophy" and their "communication atmosphere" to see if they would or would not be a "good fit" for us or our children. I hope that the school that you will be attending is a "good fit" for you--and I hope you have a very happy and successful high school career!
Deborah,
I am so sorry for being so incredibly tardy in my reply.
Yes, I am oral Deaf family hearing no sign. My godmother is a CODA, and used ASL with me in her lifetime.
I feel BiBi is the philosophy of using a person's first language to teach a second. For me, that'd be English, for another, that's ASL. I am pretty comfortable with ASL but not fully, so the interaction voice-off is good. Generally my teachers do NOT voice, except the old, experienced ones; they SimCom.
As I do have 3 years of formal ASL classes under my belt from an excellent TOD, I am more comfortable socially in OSD than a kid with NO ASL experience. But don't worry, ASL classes are provided for students and family!
If your daughter is socially starved, it is imperative that you get her in the Deaf World. MANY Deaf speak -- so many Deaf teachers voice in private meetings with students. We see Deaf adults like Shel, and realise we really CAN do anything we want to. I've learned to interact with many different kinds of people - whose English is not good. I have many friends who are strict ASL. The point is, that they feel OK with it rather than ashamed. A Deaf school's greatest lesson that it can give its students is that you are fine being Deaf - speaking, speaking and signing, etc. whatever. Deaf is fine! OK! We have many Deaf adults here and to have never seen one until recently has demolished much of my self-image as a Deaf person.
I suggest you go with your daughter's feelings. Does she feel comfortable in that ambience? Go see a few classes, see how it's done. See a class with a Deaf teacher. Go see LUNCH TIME and if possible see Rec hour.
Speaking is permitted but understand the need for flexibility and openness. If you are able to speak, and are requested to do so, it is only polite. Similarly, if you speak only and no signs without permission, you could be penalised. I was almost written up for disrespect that I forgot to sign and speak!
I feel the worst aspect of general education on the Deaf is social. There's no positive Deaf role models, you're generally an outcast - even if you speak well -, and so many people see you as different. Pity is NOT tolerated at Deaf schools that are strongly held and controlled by the Deaf, because we're Deaf too!
There's only so much you're just like everyone else until the child's anger boils over. We KNOW that's a lie. We're different but we CAN do everything, we have a right to access language, and we are not stupid and not disabled by our deafness. Where can a Deaf person learn that, but from the Deaf World?