For hearing parents who THINK they know what is best for their deaf children, they should really focus on ASL first and then speech... If they want to learn.
And how are the supposed to get to know what you say they should do?
For hearing parents who THINK they know what is best for their deaf children, they should really focus on ASL first and then speech... If they want to learn.
I can't speak for them, this is my own opinion. I just know that they would be better off knowing ASL as a young child because if they start them too early on hearing schools teaching them oral and cued speech... they will never be TRULY themselves as they are born to be and that is what Father in heaven made them be... D/deaf. Why change them if there is nothing to change. They can get teh same education from a deaf school as if we're in a mainstream school. They are closing down deaf schools left and right to put them in mainstream hearing schools. I WISHED that I had gone to a deaf school, my life would have been so much better off, I am not not speaking fro myself, many of my deaf friends have said the same as well.And how are the supposed to get to know what you say they should do?
zeefour & peekaboo what about the ones I have read posts from that got no form of sign language? It looks like your folks tried the best they knew of.
zeefour & peekaboo what about the ones I have read posts from that got no form of sign language? It looks like your folks tried the best they knew of.
Sorry for being snappy I misread some of your post. But the description of my education is the same.
I was born in 1988 and I grew uo in what was then a small mountain town There wasn't many options and my parents didn't have the internet or any in person resources really. The only option was CSDB 4-5 hours away to send me to at age 5. My dad is Native and his family and ancestors had seriously horrible experiences with residential schools . They did do their best but it was a different time and different situation than today IMO. I wish more than anything I was 10 years younger so I could have been raised bi bi and gone to RMDS the Deaf charter day school. Best of both worlds!
But parents these days have NO excuse not to expose DHH to ASL. None.
Sorry for being snappy I misread some of your post. But the description of my education is the same.
I was born in 1988 and I grew uo in what was then a small mountain town There wasn't many options and my parents didn't have the internet or any in person resources really. The only option was CSDB 4-5 hours away to send me to at age 5. My dad is Native and his family and ancestors had seriously horrible experiences with residential schools . They did do their best but it was a different time and different situation than today IMO. I wish more than anything I was 10 years younger so I could have been raised bi bi and gone to RMDS the Deaf charter day school. Best of both worlds!
But parents these days have NO excuse not to expose DHH to ASL. None.
Thanks for the apology.
I have not had a problem with accepting how you feel about your school years. But, I do feel that a lot of the tensions, especially in this thread, come from writing before stopping and making sure the reaction is to what has actually been written. Remember what you grew up with is not what all of us grew up with. So how we phrase things will reflect what our own background is.
For example I was born in 1942 rather than 1988. So . . .any deaf education when I was a kid would have been a residential school as far as I can find. And in my case, as described elsewhere, I was unilaterally deaf throughout my school years only becoming profound in the good ear as an adult. I had no problems in my regular community grade and high school.
You say "But parents these days have NO excuse not to expose DHH to ASL. None." Where are they supposed to get that information? And know that that place exists?
You say "But parents these days have NO excuse not to expose DHH to ASL. None." Where are they supposed to get that information? And know that that place exists?
You didn't spend thousands of hours in speech classes, you weren't forced to rely on amplified sound with bulky and intrusive FM systems, you didn't have language development put at risk and your exposure to sign wasn't the made up systems that were so prominent right after the oralist era ended but before today's bilingual holistic approach.
*Zillions of hours of speech therapy (or it felt like it...)--- check
*FM system... never had that- just the bulky body aid with one receiver for both ears (a bad idea...)
*Exposure to SEE et al- never had that either (I may be very grateful i didn't and I was after I took a SEE class (mandatory for my grad major at the time) in grad school.
Education for the D/HH & deafblind has come a long way...but verrrrry slooooooooooooooooooooowly ugh.
I SO 1000% agree on everything, this was me. oral, speech, touch throat, feel sounds, repeat words as little as 18 months up until I was 4 1/2 years old, thats 4 years of hard work to make everyone happy , but me! Up to this day, I am somewhat conflict who I really am since I was not able to learn ASL as a child. I look at myself and I still dont know who I am*Zillions of hours of speech therapy (or it felt like it...)--- check
*FM system... never had that- just the bulky body aid with one receiver for both ears (a bad idea...)
*Exposure to SEE et al- never had that either (I may be very grateful i didn't and I was after I took a SEE class (mandatory for my grad major at the time) in grad school.
Education for the D/HH & deafblind has come a long way...but verrrrry slooooooooooooooooooooowly ugh.
I SO 1000% agree on everything, this was me. oral, speech, touch throat, feel sounds, repeat words as little as 18 months up until I was 4 1/2 years old, thats 4 years of hard work to make everyone happy , but me! Up to this day, I am somewhat conflict who I really am since I was not able to learn ASL as a child. I look at myself and I still dont know who I am
PREACH!!! And when I've been in ASL its all hearing people I'm way ahead of but I never get to practice breaking my bad habits from years of SE and SEE.
There needs to be a program to get DHH adults who grew up DHH but weren't exposed to ASL fluent in ASL so we can be full participants in the Deaf community.
There was a program for the DHH, until they starting shutting them down one by one left to right. I know how you feel. When I was signing SEE, the deaf community looked at me weird! I never felt so awkward and embarrassed, to say the least. The hearies will never get it, they may be thinking, oh they will get over it, its just a phrase or they will grow out of it. Yeah right!
The hearies are never, Never, NEVER going to get it until it happens to them. Until the meantime, we can tell them, explain it to them, write it in a book or do a movie about it, they ain't never going to get it.
They can say they seen DHH have success in the hearing mainstream schools, but how much of percentage is that? Not many I am sure of it.
They can say they are 100% behind the parent's decision to bring their child into a hearing mainstream school, in which I am sure they have had they say in it to make sure they fall through with the hearing system... however they fell to realize the impact on most of the HOH who do not have the influence of ASL upbringing to establish their true potential before entering a mainstream school confuses them as a whole (not sure where they belong). I know NOT all have that upbringing, but I bet MOST HOH feels left out going to a mainstream school when they are no HOH and or Deaf people around to chat with. I know that's hard on any DHH going to a mainstream school.
When I was in Jr high school... I was forbidden from ever joining any kind of club, I wanted to be a cheerleader, a hearing teacher told me NO that I wasn't good enough because I was deaf, I wanted to join the Spanish class, They said NO, Ithat I couldn't speak clear enough, I was only allow to JOIN SIGN LANGUAGE CLASSES. Go figure! That's hearing school for ya!!!!! I hated my childhood! I didnt have much of one! Thanks to the hearies! The only time that made sense to me was when I was aorund deaf people and THAT'S THE TRUTH! DAMN WHY DIDN'T I LEARN ASL GROWING UP? Ugh!
OMG that's awful!!! I hated middle school, when I talked I was called retarded by the mean girls. I was 6' tall at age 11 and looked like a stick. I grew up in the poor condos near the trailer park with two little brothers and played on a guys ice hockey team and was a tomboy when my teammates ganged up and made fun of me (eventually a handful became my best friends to this day) and brought their GFs the cute little blonde hearing girls who made my life hell. middle school was when the kids who lived near me (they all spoke Spanish I was excluded so at least they were nice enough to me) had to join up with the super rich awful kids who lived up valley near the ski resort.
I tried to join drama . I tried out for the wizard of oz and practiced my try out speech for weeks. they made me be a tree. they said it was "so inspiring" I tried out and they "wanted to include me" so they made me be a god forsaken tree. I was mortified I got made fun of endlessly. I did sports because I didn't have to talk and I was tall and that's how I got a scholarship. it was nice enough to be known for something besides being the "poor hearing impaired girl"
We need to have a support group!!
I think I sort of understand what he's trying to say.
In my experience people tend to think you're either hearing or completely deaf. I have come across many people who have never met or had to work with someone with hearing loss and can be ignorant to it since the only thing they do know is what they see on tv and I find tv doesn't really represent the whole spectrum when it comes to hearing loss. What I find is most people don't take those who are deaf/HoH seriously unless the fit the original "stereotype". I've had hearing people try to tell me that Im really not deaf/deaf enough because I can speak semi well, I don't have any hearing devices, and that I don't have a real hearing issue because I don't have the "deaf" look. Or I get the other side of things where I've had hearing people who thought I was too deaf and therefore a waste of their time.