Frisky Feline
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Well I haven't met any and that's sad to know this.
Curious, are you ASL user or oral deaf?
Well I haven't met any and that's sad to know this.
Curious, are you ASL user or oral deaf?
I am deaf oral and sign in SEE.
So, I suppose that you just started socializing with Deaf people lately?
I've always socialized with deaf people most of my life. I went to mainstreamed schools and my friends and I sign in SEE. In deaf clubs, I have met a few ASL users but I have no idea how their English is so I had no way of knowing.
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I just assumed once you know sign language, you have to know English after all ASL is in English but I understand where you are coming from. ASL isn't straightforward English so it can be difficult for some.
Right, same deal with hearing people who can speak well but can not able to read or write or limited english.
I have met plenty.Well I haven't met any and that's sad to learn this.
No, ASL is NOT English....I just assumed once you know sign language, you have to know English after all ASL is in English but I understand where you are coming from. ASL isn't straightforward English so it can be difficult for some.
Some hearing people have English issues, too, believe me.Thats understandable for me. Let me clarify that one, some ASL users DO have excellent english, not all. I do not have good english, so indeed, Im an ASL user. Anyway, now you know why interpreters are necessary, as well as Certified Deaf Interpreters.
Perhaps you've lived a sheltered life with limited exposure to other socio-economic groups?Yes there are hearing people that are illiterate. But I'm thinking that's because they hear the words and learn it. They don't 'see' the words. If you get what I mean. Deaf people, on the other hand, they 'see' signed English or ASL. Not everything is in ASL, some are fingerspelled. With that perspective, I assumed all deaf people know English well enough to communicate on paper and pen. With today's age of technology, it's hard to avoid texting, emails and internet.
Back to topic, it's unfortunate they didn't get an interpreter if they can't understand paper/pen method. 7 months is way too long. I understand not the same day but not 7 months.
You posted inaccurate suppositions about deaf people and ASL, so I wanted to correct them.I said "back to the topic" on my last post.
Let's not turn this thread about me. I stated my opinion. I learned something. End of story.
We don't need another locked thread.
I just assumed once you know sign language, you have to know English after all ASL is in English but I understand where you are coming from. ASL isn't straightforward English so it can be difficult for some.
Right, same deal with hearing people who can speak well but can not able to read or write or limited english.
Really? Of course it's our responsibility to make a request but it's not our responsibility to give them the name of an agency.It is our deaf people's fault.
We need to give at the hospital's patient relations folks or social worker's office the names of sign language interpreting agencies and/or the name of sign language interpreters.
Don't give them to the nurses or the doctors or the security guard.
The hospitals in my county are prepared. They did provide Terps when I went there for family emergencies.
WHY BLAME OUTSELVES? BE PROACTIVE. Don't wait for das NAD
Yes there are hearing people that are illiterate. But I'm thinking that's because they hear the words and learn it. They don't 'see' the words. If you get what I mean. Deaf people, on the other hand, they 'see' signed English or ASL. Not everything is in ASL, some are fingerspelled. With that perspective, I assumed all deaf people know English well enough to communicate on paper and pen. With today's age of technology, it's hard to avoid texting, emails and internet.
Back to topic, it's unfortunate they didn't get an interpreter if they can't understand paper/pen method. 7 months is way too long. I understand not the same day but not 7 months.