Hi! I am hearing and an ASL student. I have had some basic ASL skills from a college course I took 10 years ago but we did not learn ANYTHING about deaf culture in that class. The course I'm taking now is going in depth about the culture. I'm reading the "Don't Just Sign! Communicate..." series and I was just reading a blurb about the Cochlear Implants. I totally understand why it is a touchy subject. In my college course, we were required to read a book, "Deaf Like Me" which was an awesome book and I learned a LOT through that book alone. Then I have a cousin who is 6 years old now and was diagnosed with a disease that left him with an 80% hearing loss at both. His parents opted to get him the implants. Then a few years later they upgraded them for him to be able to go to the ocean. My confusion lies within this paragraph of one of the books I'm reading:
"Deaf people believe that an individual should have the right to choose which culture they will belong to. The implants don't have to be used, but they cannot be removed. Therefore, one culture is chosen for a child - one path." ~Don't Just Sign! Communicate - A Student's Guide to ASL and the Deaf Community.
If the CI doesn't have to be used and the child could still learn their own language, ASL, why is NOT having implants considered the only way they can choose what they want? Seems like if the implants are there then the child can decide as he/she grows up if they want to use them or not instead of not having the option at all. I know this is a very VERY touchy subject, I'm just curious.
"Deaf people believe that an individual should have the right to choose which culture they will belong to. The implants don't have to be used, but they cannot be removed. Therefore, one culture is chosen for a child - one path." ~Don't Just Sign! Communicate - A Student's Guide to ASL and the Deaf Community.
If the CI doesn't have to be used and the child could still learn their own language, ASL, why is NOT having implants considered the only way they can choose what they want? Seems like if the implants are there then the child can decide as he/she grows up if they want to use them or not instead of not having the option at all. I know this is a very VERY touchy subject, I'm just curious.