ayala920
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2004
- Messages
- 444
- Reaction score
- 0
I discussed this topic very briefly with some fellow interpreters (one nationally certified, the other regionally certified, and myself, not certified), and we couldn't come up with an answer. So I propose this question to you brilliant folks here at AD, in the hopes that someone can come up with a semi-intellectual rationale:
Why is it that many interpreters seem to have such an incredibly hard time voicing for their deaf clients/consumers/students? Is it lack of training? Are interpreters taught to be more expressive than receptive? Perhaps it's lack of socialization within the Deaf community? I'm very curious as to why it is so many interpreters produce beautiful ASL, but stand open-mouthed when it comes time to voice what someone has signed.
I'd be curious to hear responses from the consumer side as well. I only ask that you refrain from turning this into an, "Interpreters suck at life, that's why many can't voice well" argument.
Why is it that many interpreters seem to have such an incredibly hard time voicing for their deaf clients/consumers/students? Is it lack of training? Are interpreters taught to be more expressive than receptive? Perhaps it's lack of socialization within the Deaf community? I'm very curious as to why it is so many interpreters produce beautiful ASL, but stand open-mouthed when it comes time to voice what someone has signed.
I'd be curious to hear responses from the consumer side as well. I only ask that you refrain from turning this into an, "Interpreters suck at life, that's why many can't voice well" argument.