Wow. I never knew the difficulties a deaf or hoh kid would have with terps (I'm assuming, being new and all, that terps are interpreters...) because, alas, I was mainstreamed when I was in the 4th grade. Did I sign before that point? Yes, I did. Did I mainstream successfully? Yes, I did. I went straight from an all deaf class to, well, a regular school as the main population of the world (and the U.S., I suppose, since that's where I'm from) would view it. Did my education suffer from it? Well, I don't think so - I managed just fine.
Here's the shocker part of my story - well, perhaps not so much anymore, I'm sure - but I'm classified as being severely hearing impaired, with just about full loss in my right ear, and about, oh, 10 to 20 percent hearing in my left. I'm now 36 years old, and just imagine back in the day (which was a Wednesday, btw!) the aids and the tools available to deaf kids who were mainstreamed. Did I have terps? Nope. I had speech therapy.
Before everyone gets all up in arms... Yes, I can speak. I can speak pretty damn well, so well, in fact, that no one who talks to me actually realizes that I'm deaf. Or more accurately, hard of hearing.
I have gone to college, (Go Blue!), worked jobs, even got promoted to a department supervisor, etc., etc. I've interacted with the hearing community on a daily basis ever since I was mainstreamed. That is one of my regrets that I've recently discovered - the loss of any connection to any deaf communities that I could've easily been a part of. I've lost so much of my sign language, it's not even funny. Regardless, it's like riding a bike - I've been chatting up a deaf employee at my new job and I'm amazed at how much I actually did retain. But I digress!
Everyone talks about how hard it is for the kid to be mainstreamed in terms of interpreters and whatnot.
I disagree, 1100%. It's not the schoolwork. It's not the teachers. It's not the school itself. It's the kids, the classmates, the teasing, the bullying, the misunderstanding, the ignorance, the nastiness.... I could go on, but I think you get the idea. Alas, such is the world we live in. Kids grow up making fun or being scared of the unknown. So when young ones are introduced or see someone who can't hear/see/talk etc., etc... what's the first reaction? IF they're young enough... they are curious. They ask. They probe. But getting older... (Ugh. 5th grade memories. They suck.) They laugh. They belittle. They mock the sign language.
I'm getting off the soapbox now. I apologize for the long-winded rant. I also apologize for the fact that this is my first post, when I should've posted an intro first!