whatdidyousay!
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Wow! I didn't expect there'd be a lot of answers to this thread!
I agree that DHH should be exposed to speech AND sign. Both are useful and important in my opinion. I do wish my parents encouraged asl along with speech. but you can't have everything you want. I do appreciate speech therapy but sometimes it can be a pain. I have speech once a week at a hearing services center and twice a week at school. Three hours a week of reading books out loud, repeating words and sentences, practicing s and z and x and th sounds, trying to lay off extra syllables at the end of my words (for example, I'd pronounce dinner as dinner-ah), etc. I also have to practice my listening skills (watching videos without closed captioning and having a conversation with a person nine feet away in noise). Really tiring!
If I had a deaf or HOH child, I'd teach him or her asl, and encourage speech therapy, but he or she doesn't want to, I'd back off and agree. There's nothing wrong with not speaking verbally or speaking verbally along with knowing and using ASL. At my public school, there are 5 asl-speaking students I sign to, and at home, I speak verbally to my family (I consider signing as talking) and sometimes I'd sign to them without even realizing it. :P
By the way, my audiologist and speech therapist are fluent in asl.
My dad was born in Russia and they don't have 'TH' in their alphabet
and dad use to give me 'speech lessons ' . He would tell me to count
to '3' . Dad would say " one two tree!" then have me say it and
When I repeated him one two tree!" Dad would say "Good girl!"
My oldest and ex brother would be in the doorway .
To this day I have a real hard time saying 'TH'. I was getting gas and when
inside to pay and said I was at pump 'tree' and the guy said "PUMP TREE?" I said yeah pump tree !