Queensland school investigates allegations of bullying of Deaf student after video posted online in Australia.
BRISBANE, Australia -- A Queensland school is investigating accusations a Deaf student has been subjected to repeated bullying after a video purportedly showing an instance of the alleged abuse surfaced online.
The video, originally posted to social media site 9GAG, shows a group of students surrounding the schoolboy, stomping at him and throwing air punches at him.
The person who posted the video said the incident happened at Victoria Point State High School in Redland City, east of Brisbane, and claims their son is the victim.
"My Deaf son getting harassed at school by these a*******," the person said.
"I have been in contact with the school and yet nothing changes.
"My daughter took this video to show everyone what was happening on a daily basis."
The video has been circulated on other social media sites including Facebook and Reddit.
In a statement to 7NEWS.com.au, the Queensland education department said the school was aware of the video and does not tolerate bullying and violence.
"Victoria Point State High School is committed to providing a safe, respectful and disciplined learning environment," the statement read.
"Any situation that threatens the safety and wellbeing of students or others in the school community is treated extremely seriously and dealt with as a matter of priority.
SOURCE - 7News
Related Bullying:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Nyle DiMarco: Were You Bullied For Being Deaf?
Related Mainstreaming School:
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Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
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Related Deaf and Hearing Worlds:
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Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
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Showing posts with label Deaf Students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deaf Students. Show all posts
Vehicle Crashed Into Deaf School Bus
Car rear-ends bus from Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind.
PHOENIX, Arizona -- Police are investigating a crash in which a car rear-ended a school bus from the Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind. It happened just before 4 p.m. Friday on the Interstate 17 frontage road near Northern Avenue.
Captain Rob McDade of the Phoenix Fire Department said there were children are on the bus, but none of them was hurt. The bus driver reportedly had minor injuries, as did the driver of the car that hit the bus. The bus driver was treated at the scene. The driver of the car reportedly was taken to the hospital.
Police said this was a chain-reaction three-vehicle wreck. The car that hit the bus had been rear-ended by a another vehicle.
A second bus was brought in to pick up the students.
The Arizona Department of Transportation tweeted that it closed the I-17 Northern Avenue off-ramp while the on-scene portion of the investigation was underway.
The ASDB Phoenix Campus is located at 7654 N. 19th Ave., which is not far from the scene of the crash.
SOURCE - 3TV/CBS 5
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PHOENIX, Arizona -- Police are investigating a crash in which a car rear-ended a school bus from the Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and the Blind. It happened just before 4 p.m. Friday on the Interstate 17 frontage road near Northern Avenue.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Captain Rob McDade of the Phoenix Fire Department said there were children are on the bus, but none of them was hurt. The bus driver reportedly had minor injuries, as did the driver of the car that hit the bus. The bus driver was treated at the scene. The driver of the car reportedly was taken to the hospital.
Police said this was a chain-reaction three-vehicle wreck. The car that hit the bus had been rear-ended by a another vehicle.
A second bus was brought in to pick up the students.
The Arizona Department of Transportation tweeted that it closed the I-17 Northern Avenue off-ramp while the on-scene portion of the investigation was underway.
The ASDB Phoenix Campus is located at 7654 N. 19th Ave., which is not far from the scene of the crash.
SOURCE - 3TV/CBS 5
Related Hit-and-Run & Road Rage:
Deaf Driver Hit and Run Zombie Walk
Deaf Driver Found Guilty In 'Zombie Walk' Crash
Deaf NFL Derrick Coleman Arrested For Hit & Run
Deaf Man Could Lose Leg After Hit-and-Run
Deaf Couple Killed in Hit-and-Run by Semi Truck
Deaf Teacher of TSD Dies by Hit-and-Run
Deaf Man Dies After Florida 'Road Rage' Incident
Vehicle Crashed Into The Deaf School Bus
StopXam - Stop a Douchebag Movement
The Worst Road Rage Incidents Of All Time
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Deaf Korean Short Film ‘Midnight Sun’
A short film based on the Korean love story in ‘Midnight Sun’ of two Deaf teenagers struggle to earn respect and love.
AsianCrush releases ‘Midnight Sun’ (미브나잇 썬) is about two hearing impaired high school students struggle to find love and respect in this poignant drama. A Deaf girl goes on a her first date, but he's not who she hoped he'd be.
English Subtitles Version.
Starring:
Seo Ye-rin
Kim Do-jin
Ryu Jun-yeol
Directed By:
Cho Yong-Won 조용원
AsianCrush is the leading streaming service dedicated to Asian entertainment in North America, with over 1000 premium movies and TV shows from the leading entertainment producers in Asia. Subscribe to K-Crush YouTube Channel.
Follow @AsianCrush:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/asiancrush.tv
Instagram: https://instagram.com/asncrsh
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/asiancrush
Website: http://asiancrush.com
Related Documentary:
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Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
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Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
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VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
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Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
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AsianCrush releases ‘Midnight Sun’ (미브나잇 썬) is about two hearing impaired high school students struggle to find love and respect in this poignant drama. A Deaf girl goes on a her first date, but he's not who she hoped he'd be.
English Subtitles Version.
Starring:
Seo Ye-rin
Kim Do-jin
Ryu Jun-yeol
Directed By:
Cho Yong-Won 조용원
AsianCrush is the leading streaming service dedicated to Asian entertainment in North America, with over 1000 premium movies and TV shows from the leading entertainment producers in Asia. Subscribe to K-Crush YouTube Channel.
Follow @AsianCrush:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/asiancrush.tv
Instagram: https://instagram.com/asncrsh
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/asiancrush
Website: http://asiancrush.com
Related Documentary:
Deaf Poetry Short Film 'Dear Hearing World'
Deaf Romance Short Film 'Noise'
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Can Deaf People Hear Their Own Thoughts ?
Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
The Deaf Holocaust - Deaf People and Nazi Germany
A&E: Born This Way Presents 'Deaf Out Loud'
Related Burger King:
Burger King's ASL For The Deaf Community
Burger King Worker Refuses Service To Deaf Man
Deaf Woman Suing Burger King
Related Posts:
#DeafAwareness - #DeafKoreans - #DocumentaryFilm - #ShortFilm - #SouthKorea
Deaf Disabled Man Brutally Attacked
Warning graphic content: Deaf Russian woman brutally beaten and tortured on Deaf physically handicapped outside while one records it.
MOSCOW, Russia -- Elya is a Deaf girl, 17 years old, attends mainstreaming school from Balashikha, a very inactive girl and tortures all people and beats for no reason, always lies and behaves like a spoiled brat. Nikita is also a Deaf boy, 16 years old, studying in school, there is a problem with his mother and he is in an orphanage, he is very weak and thin. What is the problem?
In that, Nikita's iPhone 6c broke and he took it for repairs, and suddenly Elya told him that she would give him an iPhone 8+, and that he give her 10 thousand ruble, but Nikita did not believe her, because he knows that she is lying brazenly and torturing. So, they met and he did not know that this would happen.
Let's go to Izmailovo Forest, and Elya started the problem, and tells him "where are my 10 thousand?" and he says he left and didn’t take it, because he has problems with his family, and Elya began to be rude to him and treat him terribly.
Elya, she is such a spoiled brat girl that you will start to communicate with her, and then once will start a problem, and the absurd speaks. Also, she steals phone numbers in stores, cuts herself, and beats anyone. So Nikita does not think that to sit in a colony is a terrible feeling. Let's get a lot of views so that the whole world sees and finds out that it’s a terrible feeling to do this to Deaf Russians.
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MOSCOW, Russia -- Elya is a Deaf girl, 17 years old, attends mainstreaming school from Balashikha, a very inactive girl and tortures all people and beats for no reason, always lies and behaves like a spoiled brat. Nikita is also a Deaf boy, 16 years old, studying in school, there is a problem with his mother and he is in an orphanage, he is very weak and thin. What is the problem?
In that, Nikita's iPhone 6c broke and he took it for repairs, and suddenly Elya told him that she would give him an iPhone 8+, and that he give her 10 thousand ruble, but Nikita did not believe her, because he knows that she is lying brazenly and torturing. So, they met and he did not know that this would happen.
Let's go to Izmailovo Forest, and Elya started the problem, and tells him "where are my 10 thousand?" and he says he left and didn’t take it, because he has problems with his family, and Elya began to be rude to him and treat him terribly.
Elya, she is such a spoiled brat girl that you will start to communicate with her, and then once will start a problem, and the absurd speaks. Also, she steals phone numbers in stores, cuts herself, and beats anyone. So Nikita does not think that to sit in a colony is a terrible feeling. Let's get a lot of views so that the whole world sees and finds out that it’s a terrible feeling to do this to Deaf Russians.
Related LiveLeak:
Deaf Man Rescues Deer From Frozen River
Taco Bell Complains About Deaf Customers
Deaf Man Trolls Turkish Prime Minister
Deaf Black Women Fight In Public Park
Walmart Store Trashed By Mob Of Teenagers
Deaf Man Kicked In The Head By Passenger
Huge Increase in 'Disabled' Scam in Europe
One-Eyed Deaf Man Fights With The Syrian Army
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'Gallaudet Eleven' Helped NASA Leave Earth
NASA turned to 11 Deaf men ultimately played a significant role in getting the first astronauts off the ground.
WASHINGTON -- In the late 1950s when NASA was a brand new agency, the list of spaceflight unknowns was significantly larger than any list of knowns. And addressing that list called for some real creativity. When it came to dealing with space sickness, NASA turned to 11 Deaf men for a baseline, and these men ultimately played a significant role in getting the first astronauts off the ground.
This specific run of tests was done in the 1960s as a cooperative venture between NASA test was a partnership between NASA and the U.S. Naval School of Aviation Medicine. The subjects were 11 Deaf men between 25 and 48 years old -- Harold Domich, Robert Greenmun, Barron Gulak, Raymond Harper, Jerald Jordan, Harry Larson, David Myers, Donald Peterson, Raymond Piper, Alvin Steele, John Zakutney -- from Gallaudet College (now Gallaudet University) that specializes in educational opportunities for the hearing impaired. And their selection was far from an arbitrary choice.
Read More: Deaf Astronauts - The Gallaudet Eleven
The key here was in how each of these men lost their hearing. All but one was deaf after a childhood bout with spinal meningitis. Spinal meningitis can, among other effects, cause lasting damage to the vestibular system of the inner ear by killing nerve and hair cells, the structures that are vital to giving our brains information about motion, balance, and even spatial orientation. This is also the system that plays a huge part in for motion sickness. There are still some conflicting explanations over where motion sickness comes from, but the traditional explanation is known as the “sensory conflict theory.” This is basically a conflict to what your eyes see and what your vestibular system feels. If you’re reading in a car you won’t see any movement but your body will feel it. The result is feeling like you want to vomit. And sometimes just outright vomiting.
When it comes to space, this system stops getting gravitational cues that distinguish up and down, but your eyes still see things normally. It’s another set of conflicting information that can lead to a space sickness akin to seasickness. Which leads to nausea.
Fun fact, “nausea” and “nautical” have the same Greek root -- “naut.” That’s not a coincidence. This has clearly been a sea-faring condition for a while now.
Sensory conflict theory explains why a functioning vestibular system is necessary for motion sickness, and also why NASA was interested in testing Deaf individuals with a damaged vestibular system to study motion sickness in spaceflight. These men are virtually immune to motion sickness, so they could be put through the ringer on all the machines that would train astronauts for spaceflight, report any physical sensations, and give researchers a baseline without having to stop because of nausea.
And the tests were insane! One test had four men spend 12 straight days inside a 20-foot slow rotation room that kept spinning at ten revolutions per minute the whole time. The disorientation would make anyone sick, but these men weren’t bothered by it. Another test had them go through zero-g flights in the so-called “Vomit Comet” before scientists looked for the presence of stress hormones in their urine as an indication of stress on the body during the testing. Men who could hear had increased levels of certain catechols and steroids in their urine while the deaf participants didn’t.
In another test in a ferry off the coast of Nova Scotia, researchers wanted to see what would happen to the men on a boat in choppy waters. The goal was to see if the deaf participants could be made seasick to understand and determine the comparative effects in unaffected subjects, aka men who could hear. The Deaf subjects played cards and hung out while 15 of the 20 hearing participants got violently ill. The Deaf men only reported physical discomfort from the test as well as fear. The rough waters were so scary many feared shipwreck, but even the panic they felt wasn’t strong enough to induce nausea. Researchers measured their blood pressure, eye movement, digestion, and other physiological effects for a good baseline until the tests were stopped… because the researchers were too sick to continue.
Ultimately, these 11 Deaf men known as the Gallaudet Eleven did a lot to help scientists understand the challenges facing humans in spaceflight.
SOURCE - Vintage Space
Related Documentary:
'Gallaudet Eleven' Helped NASA Leave Earth
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
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A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Can Deaf People Hear Their Own Thoughts ?
Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
The Deaf Holocaust - Deaf People and Nazi Germany
A&E: Born This Way Presents 'Deaf Out Loud'
Related Posts:
#DeafAmericans - #DeafHistory - #GallaudetUniversity - #Technology
WASHINGTON -- In the late 1950s when NASA was a brand new agency, the list of spaceflight unknowns was significantly larger than any list of knowns. And addressing that list called for some real creativity. When it came to dealing with space sickness, NASA turned to 11 Deaf men for a baseline, and these men ultimately played a significant role in getting the first astronauts off the ground.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
This specific run of tests was done in the 1960s as a cooperative venture between NASA test was a partnership between NASA and the U.S. Naval School of Aviation Medicine. The subjects were 11 Deaf men between 25 and 48 years old -- Harold Domich, Robert Greenmun, Barron Gulak, Raymond Harper, Jerald Jordan, Harry Larson, David Myers, Donald Peterson, Raymond Piper, Alvin Steele, John Zakutney -- from Gallaudet College (now Gallaudet University) that specializes in educational opportunities for the hearing impaired. And their selection was far from an arbitrary choice.
Read More: Deaf Astronauts - The Gallaudet Eleven
The key here was in how each of these men lost their hearing. All but one was deaf after a childhood bout with spinal meningitis. Spinal meningitis can, among other effects, cause lasting damage to the vestibular system of the inner ear by killing nerve and hair cells, the structures that are vital to giving our brains information about motion, balance, and even spatial orientation. This is also the system that plays a huge part in for motion sickness. There are still some conflicting explanations over where motion sickness comes from, but the traditional explanation is known as the “sensory conflict theory.” This is basically a conflict to what your eyes see and what your vestibular system feels. If you’re reading in a car you won’t see any movement but your body will feel it. The result is feeling like you want to vomit. And sometimes just outright vomiting.
When it comes to space, this system stops getting gravitational cues that distinguish up and down, but your eyes still see things normally. It’s another set of conflicting information that can lead to a space sickness akin to seasickness. Which leads to nausea.
Fun fact, “nausea” and “nautical” have the same Greek root -- “naut.” That’s not a coincidence. This has clearly been a sea-faring condition for a while now.
Sensory conflict theory explains why a functioning vestibular system is necessary for motion sickness, and also why NASA was interested in testing Deaf individuals with a damaged vestibular system to study motion sickness in spaceflight. These men are virtually immune to motion sickness, so they could be put through the ringer on all the machines that would train astronauts for spaceflight, report any physical sensations, and give researchers a baseline without having to stop because of nausea.
And the tests were insane! One test had four men spend 12 straight days inside a 20-foot slow rotation room that kept spinning at ten revolutions per minute the whole time. The disorientation would make anyone sick, but these men weren’t bothered by it. Another test had them go through zero-g flights in the so-called “Vomit Comet” before scientists looked for the presence of stress hormones in their urine as an indication of stress on the body during the testing. Men who could hear had increased levels of certain catechols and steroids in their urine while the deaf participants didn’t.
In another test in a ferry off the coast of Nova Scotia, researchers wanted to see what would happen to the men on a boat in choppy waters. The goal was to see if the deaf participants could be made seasick to understand and determine the comparative effects in unaffected subjects, aka men who could hear. The Deaf subjects played cards and hung out while 15 of the 20 hearing participants got violently ill. The Deaf men only reported physical discomfort from the test as well as fear. The rough waters were so scary many feared shipwreck, but even the panic they felt wasn’t strong enough to induce nausea. Researchers measured their blood pressure, eye movement, digestion, and other physiological effects for a good baseline until the tests were stopped… because the researchers were too sick to continue.
Ultimately, these 11 Deaf men known as the Gallaudet Eleven did a lot to help scientists understand the challenges facing humans in spaceflight.
SOURCE - Vintage Space
Related Documentary:
'Gallaudet Eleven' Helped NASA Leave Earth
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Can Deaf People Hear Their Own Thoughts ?
Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
The Deaf Holocaust - Deaf People and Nazi Germany
A&E: Born This Way Presents 'Deaf Out Loud'
Related Posts:
#DeafAmericans - #DeafHistory - #GallaudetUniversity - #Technology
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Atlanta teens face long suspension after assaulting hearing-impaired student at mainstream school.
ATLANTA, Georgia -- An Atlanta mother says a group of high school students who attacked her hearing-impaired daughter could be suspended from the school for one year or one semester.
Mother Kimberly Flournoy says her 18-year-old daughter Jacqueline was recently cold-clocked out of the blue on campus at Maynard Jackson High School.
“He just turned around and slapped me. I was like, ‘OK, what just happened?’” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
Right before that, another student pulled the 18-year-old’s hair.
A third student recorded the attack, which happened Nov. 30, egging the other two students on.
"I think it was hate. They were just being spiteful and mean. They wanted to make a video about it and go viral,” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
Jacqueline Flournoy says the two brothers and a female student made vulgar comments about her relationship and her speech.
The 18-year-old, who is black, has a white boyfriend. She is also hearing-impaired.
Jacqueline’s mother posted the video on social media to raise awareness about bullying and to make sure the students are punished to the fullest extent.
The attackers were initially suspended for one day and forced to apologize.
"I want them expelled from school,” Kimberly Flournoy said.
The two brothers will face a tribunal Wednesday where they could be removed from the school for one year or one semester, according to the mother.
The girl who recorded the video could face cyber-bullying discipline, Kimberly Flournoy says.
Jacqueline Flournoy wants to turn the incident into something positive. She and her mother have created an anti-bullying campaign.
"It shouldn't be happening. If it is happening, you should speak up to somebody,” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
The 18-year-old says people have to learn to treat others with respect.
Kimberly Flournoy also has a message for the parents of kids who bully.
"Parents, [you] need to talk to your children. I mean, it's bad enough that adults treat each other like this, but for kids to do it, they're learning it from someone,” she said.
Atlanta Public Schools has not yet released a comment about the video.
SOURCE - KFVS
Related Bullying:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
ATLANTA, Georgia -- An Atlanta mother says a group of high school students who attacked her hearing-impaired daughter could be suspended from the school for one year or one semester.
Mother Kimberly Flournoy says her 18-year-old daughter Jacqueline was recently cold-clocked out of the blue on campus at Maynard Jackson High School.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
“He just turned around and slapped me. I was like, ‘OK, what just happened?’” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
Right before that, another student pulled the 18-year-old’s hair.
A third student recorded the attack, which happened Nov. 30, egging the other two students on.
"I think it was hate. They were just being spiteful and mean. They wanted to make a video about it and go viral,” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
Jacqueline Flournoy says the two brothers and a female student made vulgar comments about her relationship and her speech.
The 18-year-old, who is black, has a white boyfriend. She is also hearing-impaired.
Jacqueline’s mother posted the video on social media to raise awareness about bullying and to make sure the students are punished to the fullest extent.
The attackers were initially suspended for one day and forced to apologize.
"I want them expelled from school,” Kimberly Flournoy said.
The two brothers will face a tribunal Wednesday where they could be removed from the school for one year or one semester, according to the mother.
The girl who recorded the video could face cyber-bullying discipline, Kimberly Flournoy says.
Jacqueline Flournoy wants to turn the incident into something positive. She and her mother have created an anti-bullying campaign.
"It shouldn't be happening. If it is happening, you should speak up to somebody,” Jacqueline Flournoy said.
The 18-year-old says people have to learn to treat others with respect.
Kimberly Flournoy also has a message for the parents of kids who bully.
"Parents, [you] need to talk to your children. I mean, it's bad enough that adults treat each other like this, but for kids to do it, they're learning it from someone,” she said.
Atlanta Public Schools has not yet released a comment about the video.
SOURCE - KFVS
Related Bullying:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
Chinese Medical Team Helps Ghana Deaf School
Chinese medical team offers free screening to the Deaf school for students and staff in Ghana.
MAMPONG -- New China TV channel on YouTube share the News in English subtitles - a nine-member Chinese medical team on Saturday provided free physical screening to teachers, students of the Demonstration School for the Deaf in Akuapim-Mampong, some 35 km north of the Ghana capital, Accra.
Subscribe at New Chine TV: https://youtube.com/channel/newchinatv
Related Posts: #DeafChinese - #DeafCommunity - #DeafNews - #SignLanguage
MAMPONG -- New China TV channel on YouTube share the News in English subtitles - a nine-member Chinese medical team on Saturday provided free physical screening to teachers, students of the Demonstration School for the Deaf in Akuapim-Mampong, some 35 km north of the Ghana capital, Accra.
Subscribe at New Chine TV: https://youtube.com/channel/newchinatv
Related Posts: #DeafChinese - #DeafCommunity - #DeafNews - #SignLanguage
The 200th Anniversary of Deaf Education
The 200th anniversary of Deaf Education in America.
Gallaudet University President Roberta J. Cordano shares a special message in honor of the 200th anniversary of Deaf education in America.
Gallaudet University is the world leader in liberal education and career development for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing undergraduate students. The University enjoys an international reputation for the outstanding graduate programs it provides Deaf, Hard-of-Hearing, and hearing students, as well as for the quality of the research it conducts on the history, language, culture, and other topics related to Deaf people. Visit www.gallaudet.edu for more information.
Find more Gallaudet videos: Gallaudet Channel.
Related: Gallaudet Presidential Inauguration Celebration
Gallaudet University President Roberta J. Cordano shares a special message in honor of the 200th anniversary of Deaf education in America.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Gallaudet University is the world leader in liberal education and career development for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing undergraduate students. The University enjoys an international reputation for the outstanding graduate programs it provides Deaf, Hard-of-Hearing, and hearing students, as well as for the quality of the research it conducts on the history, language, culture, and other topics related to Deaf people. Visit www.gallaudet.edu for more information.
Find more Gallaudet videos: Gallaudet Channel.
Related: Gallaudet Presidential Inauguration Celebration
No Limits Theater Is Therapy For Deaf Kids
CNN Heroes: Born Deaf, Live Determined - Theater is Therapy for Kids with Hearing Loss.
CULVER CITY, California -- Twenty years ago, Michelle Christie directed a stage performance. The actors were all students with hearing loss. As a teacher, Christie had been helping them learn to speak -- and listen. Theater, she realized, brought a noticeable improvement in their oral language skills and self-esteem.
"When you have characters in costume and they're all with all their friends who had a hearing loss, they felt like they belonged," Christie said. "I remember just looking at the audience a lot and seeing parents just weep. They're just so happy to see that their child can do this."
The theater group was such a success that Christie was asked to continue the program and replicate it in other cities. So, in 1997, she founded No Limits Theater Group. She traveled the country, bringing together groups of children with hearing loss to rehearse and perform plays written specifically for them.
From place to place, Christie says she noticed a trend: Students who'd had more early intervention also had improved speech and reading ability. She found that low-income students were falling through the cracks because families couldn't afford the resources their children needed to succeed.
"It just didn't seem fair. I decided I wanted to start an educational center really helping families in poverty," she said.
Today, her No Limits organization has three education centers -- located in California and Las Vegas -- offering free support and enrichment programs to children with hearing loss. The organization works with about 600 children and their families each year.
No Limits has also produced 100 plays in 13 states. The group has reached more than 200,000 people nationwide.
"Many kids are enrolled in college or have already graduated from college. It's so exciting to see it, because now they are the future. ... I want them to dream big for their lives," Christie said. "We have kids who are pilots. We have scientists. We have lawyers. We have psychologists. There are so many successful people with hearing loss."
CNN's Allie Torgan spoke with Christie about her work. Below is an edited version of their conversation... HERE.
SOURCE - CNN
Related Posts: #DeafCommunity - #DeafNews - #DeafPeople - #FakeNews
CULVER CITY, California -- Twenty years ago, Michelle Christie directed a stage performance. The actors were all students with hearing loss. As a teacher, Christie had been helping them learn to speak -- and listen. Theater, she realized, brought a noticeable improvement in their oral language skills and self-esteem.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
"When you have characters in costume and they're all with all their friends who had a hearing loss, they felt like they belonged," Christie said. "I remember just looking at the audience a lot and seeing parents just weep. They're just so happy to see that their child can do this."
The theater group was such a success that Christie was asked to continue the program and replicate it in other cities. So, in 1997, she founded No Limits Theater Group. She traveled the country, bringing together groups of children with hearing loss to rehearse and perform plays written specifically for them.
From place to place, Christie says she noticed a trend: Students who'd had more early intervention also had improved speech and reading ability. She found that low-income students were falling through the cracks because families couldn't afford the resources their children needed to succeed.
"It just didn't seem fair. I decided I wanted to start an educational center really helping families in poverty," she said.
Today, her No Limits organization has three education centers -- located in California and Las Vegas -- offering free support and enrichment programs to children with hearing loss. The organization works with about 600 children and their families each year.
No Limits has also produced 100 plays in 13 states. The group has reached more than 200,000 people nationwide.
"Many kids are enrolled in college or have already graduated from college. It's so exciting to see it, because now they are the future. ... I want them to dream big for their lives," Christie said. "We have kids who are pilots. We have scientists. We have lawyers. We have psychologists. There are so many successful people with hearing loss."
CNN's Allie Torgan spoke with Christie about her work. Below is an edited version of their conversation... HERE.
SOURCE - CNN
Related Posts: #DeafCommunity - #DeafNews - #DeafPeople - #FakeNews
Deaf Mascot Makes The Crowds Cheer
How a Deaf high school mascot moves the crowd to his beat.
PORTLAND, Maine -- On the court, the Portland High School Bulldogs are reigning state champions. But, during most games this season, the crowd often finds its inspiration from freshman Kamron King, the team’s Deaf mascot.
On the court, the Portland High School Bulldogs are reigning Maine state basketball champions. But, during most games this season, the crowd often finds it inspiration from what's happening on the sidelines.
Freshman Kamron King is the team's mascot and "sixth man." Dressed in an over-sized gray Bulldog outfit, King often runs the sidelines getting the crowd into a frenzy. He's also Deaf and can't hear any of it.
"Being a mascot is kind of a very cool job to do for the school and I kinda love it," King told NBC News.
Deaf from birth, the 15-year-old student has mastered sign language and how to lip read and speak. He says he uses his eyes and his energy to get the crowd fired up. To compensate for what he cannot hear, he observes the movements of those in the bleachers, getting a feel for the emotion of the moment. "I try to get the crowd louder [so] that they know I am supporting them," said King.
At home, he's affectionately known as "Kam the Ham." His parents, though, were initially wary of the idea of their hearing impaired son -- who like many deaf children struggled with balance -- taking on the mascot role.
"I thought, good Lord, he's gonna put this thing on and be out in front of a hundred people and trip and fall over," said Michael King, Kamron's father.
Those concerns proved to be misplaced. Kamron has thrived this season and made a little history as well, becoming Portland High School's first ever Deaf mascot.
"He brings up all the spirit," said a team cheerleader. "He makes everyone happy and it just makes the entire experience better."
Kamron's achievements behind the mask have also served as an inspiration to other Deaf young people, says John Jones, director of instruction at the Maine Educational Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.
"I think he's setting a great example for other students who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing who may be reluctant to try new things," Jones told NBC News.
For Kamron, though, his disability is "no big deal." He says he usually is more concerned with staying cool in the furry costume.
SOURCE - NBC Nightly News
PORTLAND, Maine -- On the court, the Portland High School Bulldogs are reigning state champions. But, during most games this season, the crowd often finds its inspiration from freshman Kamron King, the team’s Deaf mascot.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
On the court, the Portland High School Bulldogs are reigning Maine state basketball champions. But, during most games this season, the crowd often finds it inspiration from what's happening on the sidelines.
Freshman Kamron King is the team's mascot and "sixth man." Dressed in an over-sized gray Bulldog outfit, King often runs the sidelines getting the crowd into a frenzy. He's also Deaf and can't hear any of it.
"Being a mascot is kind of a very cool job to do for the school and I kinda love it," King told NBC News.
Deaf from birth, the 15-year-old student has mastered sign language and how to lip read and speak. He says he uses his eyes and his energy to get the crowd fired up. To compensate for what he cannot hear, he observes the movements of those in the bleachers, getting a feel for the emotion of the moment. "I try to get the crowd louder [so] that they know I am supporting them," said King.
At home, he's affectionately known as "Kam the Ham." His parents, though, were initially wary of the idea of their hearing impaired son -- who like many deaf children struggled with balance -- taking on the mascot role.
"I thought, good Lord, he's gonna put this thing on and be out in front of a hundred people and trip and fall over," said Michael King, Kamron's father.
Those concerns proved to be misplaced. Kamron has thrived this season and made a little history as well, becoming Portland High School's first ever Deaf mascot.
"He brings up all the spirit," said a team cheerleader. "He makes everyone happy and it just makes the entire experience better."
Kamron's achievements behind the mask have also served as an inspiration to other Deaf young people, says John Jones, director of instruction at the Maine Educational Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.
"I think he's setting a great example for other students who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing who may be reluctant to try new things," Jones told NBC News.
For Kamron, though, his disability is "no big deal." He says he usually is more concerned with staying cool in the furry costume.
SOURCE - NBC Nightly News
Deaf Awareness Short Film - 'Rise Up'
A Short Film 'Rise Up' To Bullying of the Hearing Impaired.
The inspirational Deaf awareness short film is about a young Deaf girl' survivor by bullying at the mainstreaming school. Tired life fighter, move rise up a thousand times again, for you quiet dying move for you, rise up to bullying of the hearing impaired, love is a universal language. Video with english subtitles.
A film producer by Lucas LeBlanc and Alex Carrasco.
Related:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Awareness Short Film - 'Rise Up'
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Related Posts: #DeafNews - #Bullying - #DeafVictims
The inspirational Deaf awareness short film is about a young Deaf girl' survivor by bullying at the mainstreaming school. Tired life fighter, move rise up a thousand times again, for you quiet dying move for you, rise up to bullying of the hearing impaired, love is a universal language. Video with english subtitles.
A film producer by Lucas LeBlanc and Alex Carrasco.
Related:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Awareness Short Film - 'Rise Up'
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Related Posts: #DeafNews - #Bullying - #DeafVictims
Deaf Crows Headed To The Sound Off Festival
A group of talented Deaf Regina high school students will soon be taking their show on the road to Edmonton Sound Off Festival.
REGINA, Saskatchewan -- After two, sold-out performances this summer of the one-act play Deaf Crows by the Thom Collegiate students, they were inundated with requests to do other shows. Teacher Joanne Weber said most were turned down because they’re simply not set up to tour. But they couldn’t pass up the invitation to perform next month at the Sound Off Deaf Theatre Festival in Edmonton. A first for Canada, the festival will showcase the work of Deaf playwrights and actors, which presents a unique educational benefit for the students, said Weber.
“These kids will have a chance to be part of a vibrant Deaf community, if only for about three days,” she said, explaining such opportunities are lacking in a small community like Regina.
Fundraising events by the students’ parents combined with a highly successful GoFundMe campaign to generate the money to cover travel expenses for the group of 17, including students and chaperones. They perform Feb. 17, 18, and 19 in Edmonton.
Weber calls the outpouring of support “amazing,” with contributions even coming in from theatre companies from in and outside the province. Momentum grew when a U.S.-based sign language news service did a feature story on the group.
Last year the students at the Deaf and Hard of Hearing program at Thom worked with artist-in-residence Chrystene Ells and Berny Hi, a Regina filmmaker, to create visual art, write a script and develop acting skills. Wearing crow masks that they fashioned, the students shared their experiences and challenges growing up in a hearing world -- such as being excluded during games like telephone and hide and seek or struggling to be understood by classmates. The actors signed their lines, and a storyteller interpreted for the hearing audience, except for one part so hearing people might appreciate the deaf experience of seeing but not necessarily comprehending what’s going on.
The original plan was for one Regina show, but when it sold out, a second was added.
Weber, who is herself Deaf, is surprised how Deaf Crows took off. “I have basically toiled in obscurity all these years. And it’s weird to get all this spotlight on the performance. It seemed to have touched some kind of a raw nerve … It’s so interesting because at the same time we have the human rights commission investigating complaints about how poor these deaf people are served in this province.”
In written surveys, audience members called Deaf Crows “inspiring,” “captivating,” “thought provoking” and “powerful.”
She said the students and their parents saw the benefits. “It’s really amazing how those kids have been transformed,” said Weber. “They’ve really come alive,” she added, explaining how they’ve gone from feeling isolated to working together in a community.
“For the first time, their experiences were valued and recognized.”
In a video prepared for the fundraising campaign, student Fatima Nafisa, signs, “I don’t want Deaf Crows to be over.”
Now that they’re headed to Edmonton, the students are back in rehearsals, re-learning lines, and sorting out how they’re going to re-create the same magic in a theatre far different from Regina’s Artesian.
The students are also working on a visual art installation planned for the Dunlop Gallery in October. And the success of Deaf Crows has also led to the creation of a non-profit theatre group (the Deaf Crows Collective) that’s looking to develop more pieces.
In the fundraising campaign video, student Alex Bristow, signs: “All people want the same thing -- to be equal, strong and feel like they are supported.”
SOURCE - Regina Leader-Post
Follow @DeafCrows:
Like on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/deafcrow
Related Deaf Saskatchewans:
Saskatchewan Needs More ASL Interpreters
Deaf Education 'Nonexistent' In First Nations
Deaf Crows Headed To The Sound Off Festival
Related Post: #DeafTheatre -- #DeafCanadians
REGINA, Saskatchewan -- After two, sold-out performances this summer of the one-act play Deaf Crows by the Thom Collegiate students, they were inundated with requests to do other shows. Teacher Joanne Weber said most were turned down because they’re simply not set up to tour. But they couldn’t pass up the invitation to perform next month at the Sound Off Deaf Theatre Festival in Edmonton. A first for Canada, the festival will showcase the work of Deaf playwrights and actors, which presents a unique educational benefit for the students, said Weber.
“These kids will have a chance to be part of a vibrant Deaf community, if only for about three days,” she said, explaining such opportunities are lacking in a small community like Regina.
Fundraising events by the students’ parents combined with a highly successful GoFundMe campaign to generate the money to cover travel expenses for the group of 17, including students and chaperones. They perform Feb. 17, 18, and 19 in Edmonton.
Weber calls the outpouring of support “amazing,” with contributions even coming in from theatre companies from in and outside the province. Momentum grew when a U.S.-based sign language news service did a feature story on the group.
Last year the students at the Deaf and Hard of Hearing program at Thom worked with artist-in-residence Chrystene Ells and Berny Hi, a Regina filmmaker, to create visual art, write a script and develop acting skills. Wearing crow masks that they fashioned, the students shared their experiences and challenges growing up in a hearing world -- such as being excluded during games like telephone and hide and seek or struggling to be understood by classmates. The actors signed their lines, and a storyteller interpreted for the hearing audience, except for one part so hearing people might appreciate the deaf experience of seeing but not necessarily comprehending what’s going on.
The original plan was for one Regina show, but when it sold out, a second was added.
Weber, who is herself Deaf, is surprised how Deaf Crows took off. “I have basically toiled in obscurity all these years. And it’s weird to get all this spotlight on the performance. It seemed to have touched some kind of a raw nerve … It’s so interesting because at the same time we have the human rights commission investigating complaints about how poor these deaf people are served in this province.”
In written surveys, audience members called Deaf Crows “inspiring,” “captivating,” “thought provoking” and “powerful.”
She said the students and their parents saw the benefits. “It’s really amazing how those kids have been transformed,” said Weber. “They’ve really come alive,” she added, explaining how they’ve gone from feeling isolated to working together in a community.
“For the first time, their experiences were valued and recognized.”
In a video prepared for the fundraising campaign, student Fatima Nafisa, signs, “I don’t want Deaf Crows to be over.”
Now that they’re headed to Edmonton, the students are back in rehearsals, re-learning lines, and sorting out how they’re going to re-create the same magic in a theatre far different from Regina’s Artesian.
The students are also working on a visual art installation planned for the Dunlop Gallery in October. And the success of Deaf Crows has also led to the creation of a non-profit theatre group (the Deaf Crows Collective) that’s looking to develop more pieces.
In the fundraising campaign video, student Alex Bristow, signs: “All people want the same thing -- to be equal, strong and feel like they are supported.”
SOURCE - Regina Leader-Post
Follow @DeafCrows:
Like on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/deafcrow
Related Deaf Saskatchewans:
Saskatchewan Needs More ASL Interpreters
Deaf Education 'Nonexistent' In First Nations
Deaf Crows Headed To The Sound Off Festival
Related Post: #DeafTheatre -- #DeafCanadians
Deaf Football Team On Microsoft Surface TV Ad
Microsoft finds its latest inspiration in this All-Deaf American high school football team.
FREMONT, California -- The Eagles are the high school football team at the California School for the Deaf (CSD). They use Microsoft Surface for their game preparation, developing the playbooks that help them win big.
During this weekend's NFL playoffs on NBC, Microsoft debuted "Football, Teamwork and Technology," an ad featuring the Eagles, the California School for the Deaf's football team.
"We're a brotherhood, we're a team," a player signs.
Football is among the American sports that strikes an immediate emotional chord. In this case, it's also compelling to see how teamwork and communication--so critical to sports philosophy--play out among the Eagles. It's not something we get to see often.
And here's what we see: less shouting and more tactility, with pensive shots of eyes that follow and interpret the split-second movements of hands, faces and bodies. Collaboration, we suddenly realize, is tangible--something you can see and touch. Amid all this are shots of plays, made mobile and more shareable by the magic of technology.
"We use the Surface to communicate and prepare," the player signs, and at the end, a narrator drives the tablet's value add home: "For any player, for any coach, for any team, the art of collaboration builds champions."
Get it? Because the Surface facilitates collaboration. We can roll with that, but something happens between that statement and the tagline that immediately follows--"Empowering us all: Microsoft."
How do you go from being one useful tool in a collaborative arsenal to Empowerer in Chief?
If you're a high school football fan who hasn't heard of the Eagles, that has more to do with the priorities of broadcast than its capacity to decimate. Microsoft made a smart choice in associating the Surface with a team that's both serious on-field and a blossoming subject of mainstream interest.
In October, the Eagles were featured in ESPN's first-ever football broadcast to feature an all-Deaf school, the Geico ESPN High School Football Showcase, where they destroyed Woodland Christian's Cardinals, winning 43-0.
In fact, over the course of its last season, the Eagles lost only twice--to the Indiana School for the Deaf, and to Berean Christian--and otherwise outscored opponents by an average margin of 52-8.
The team was also profiled in ESPN's E:60 Silent Night Lights (shown below), and in an "Underdogs" episode for Sports Illustrated some years before.
When it comes to winning, technology is secondary to group cohesion. There's more to the Eagles' success than its choice of hardware--they've got discipline, brotherhood, high stakes, something to prove, and, yes, strong plays.
So, it isn't the Surface (much less Microsoft) that empowers the Eagles. If they had to use binder paper, or sticks and rocks, to sketch plays, we're convinced they'd be just as strong on the field.
Instead, it's the Eagles that empower the Surface, whose track record is somewhat less objectively impressive. There's nothing wrong with being one good tool in a winning arsenal; it's a respectable position in a context that, frankly, resembles teamwork.
And what's kryptonite to a team? The one guy (or in this case, brand) that thinks he's responsible for all the magic.
Learn more at: http://www.microsoft.com/empowering
Audio Description Version: https://youtu.be/1v5kw9OHFkw
SOURCE - Adweek
Related:
Share: California School For The Deaf Fremont
Starkey Hearing Foundation 'Exploitation'
Maryland School For The Deaf On Toyota TV Ad
FREMONT, California -- The Eagles are the high school football team at the California School for the Deaf (CSD). They use Microsoft Surface for their game preparation, developing the playbooks that help them win big.
During this weekend's NFL playoffs on NBC, Microsoft debuted "Football, Teamwork and Technology," an ad featuring the Eagles, the California School for the Deaf's football team.
"We're a brotherhood, we're a team," a player signs.
Football is among the American sports that strikes an immediate emotional chord. In this case, it's also compelling to see how teamwork and communication--so critical to sports philosophy--play out among the Eagles. It's not something we get to see often.
And here's what we see: less shouting and more tactility, with pensive shots of eyes that follow and interpret the split-second movements of hands, faces and bodies. Collaboration, we suddenly realize, is tangible--something you can see and touch. Amid all this are shots of plays, made mobile and more shareable by the magic of technology.
"We use the Surface to communicate and prepare," the player signs, and at the end, a narrator drives the tablet's value add home: "For any player, for any coach, for any team, the art of collaboration builds champions."
Get it? Because the Surface facilitates collaboration. We can roll with that, but something happens between that statement and the tagline that immediately follows--"Empowering us all: Microsoft."
How do you go from being one useful tool in a collaborative arsenal to Empowerer in Chief?
If you're a high school football fan who hasn't heard of the Eagles, that has more to do with the priorities of broadcast than its capacity to decimate. Microsoft made a smart choice in associating the Surface with a team that's both serious on-field and a blossoming subject of mainstream interest.
In October, the Eagles were featured in ESPN's first-ever football broadcast to feature an all-Deaf school, the Geico ESPN High School Football Showcase, where they destroyed Woodland Christian's Cardinals, winning 43-0.
In fact, over the course of its last season, the Eagles lost only twice--to the Indiana School for the Deaf, and to Berean Christian--and otherwise outscored opponents by an average margin of 52-8.
The team was also profiled in ESPN's E:60 Silent Night Lights (shown below), and in an "Underdogs" episode for Sports Illustrated some years before.
When it comes to winning, technology is secondary to group cohesion. There's more to the Eagles' success than its choice of hardware--they've got discipline, brotherhood, high stakes, something to prove, and, yes, strong plays.
So, it isn't the Surface (much less Microsoft) that empowers the Eagles. If they had to use binder paper, or sticks and rocks, to sketch plays, we're convinced they'd be just as strong on the field.
Instead, it's the Eagles that empower the Surface, whose track record is somewhat less objectively impressive. There's nothing wrong with being one good tool in a winning arsenal; it's a respectable position in a context that, frankly, resembles teamwork.
And what's kryptonite to a team? The one guy (or in this case, brand) that thinks he's responsible for all the magic.
Learn more at: http://www.microsoft.com/empowering
Audio Description Version: https://youtu.be/1v5kw9OHFkw
SOURCE - Adweek
Related:
Share: California School For The Deaf Fremont
Starkey Hearing Foundation 'Exploitation'
Maryland School For The Deaf On Toyota TV Ad
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California School For The Deaf Fremont
Hearing parents of Deaf children share story about the California School for the Deaf, Fremont.
The California School for the Deaf (CSD), in Fremont, is a free and public accredited school in the state of California that serves Deaf children.
The CSD has made a commitment to be a Deaf centered environment in which the design of learning and the language of instruction are consistent with a Bilingual-Bicultural approach to educating Deaf children.
The school values itself as a multi-cultural community of varied ethnic backgrounds through which people are able to learn and work together to promote the academic, linguistic, vocational, cultural, social, emotional and physical development of Deaf children. The involvement of parents, students, staff, the Deaf community, the business community and the community at large is regarded as essential to the mission of the school.
A safe, academic, Deaf-centered culture is nurtured at CSD. Dedication to students is the hallmark of CSD staff. Visit CSD website, http://csdeagles.com
SOURCE
Follow @CaliforniaSchoolfortheDeaf:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/csdthat
Twitter: https://twitter.com/csdeagles
Website: https://csdeagles.com
Related CSD, Fremont, Riverside: #CaliforniaSchoolfortheDeaf
The California School for the Deaf (CSD), in Fremont, is a free and public accredited school in the state of California that serves Deaf children.
The CSD has made a commitment to be a Deaf centered environment in which the design of learning and the language of instruction are consistent with a Bilingual-Bicultural approach to educating Deaf children.
The school values itself as a multi-cultural community of varied ethnic backgrounds through which people are able to learn and work together to promote the academic, linguistic, vocational, cultural, social, emotional and physical development of Deaf children. The involvement of parents, students, staff, the Deaf community, the business community and the community at large is regarded as essential to the mission of the school.
A safe, academic, Deaf-centered culture is nurtured at CSD. Dedication to students is the hallmark of CSD staff. Visit CSD website, http://csdeagles.com
SOURCE
Follow @CaliforniaSchoolfortheDeaf:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/csdthat
Twitter: https://twitter.com/csdeagles
Website: https://csdeagles.com
Related CSD, Fremont, Riverside: #CaliforniaSchoolfortheDeaf
Don't Erase School For Deaf History In NL
Deaf News: Don't erase school for Deaf history: former administrator.
ST. JOHN'S, NL -- The Telegram: John Reade points through windows of the former School for the Deaf and rhymes off classrooms and labs and how they were designed with no obstructions to students' ability to follow instruction.
John Reade recalls the home economics teacher who designed her own classroom and others who contributed ideas that made it easier for the students of the specialized facility.
His voice fills with pride as he recalls the Queen Elizabeth II's visit in the 1990s.
He remembers how he and other staff would visit the site in the mid-1980s when it was under construction and look over the foundation footings, imagining what would be a state of the art facility.
Before moving to Topsail Road, the school was located in an old military building by the airport and the windows would shake when planes took off and landed, wreaking havoc on those students who had hearing aids, he said.
Though many people in St. John's refer to it as the old School for the Deaf, there are no visible markings of that history and Reade said they disappeared two years ago.
The facility has had many uses since the school closed several years ago.
One wing now houses the school lunch program and it's filled in as temporary location for students from schools under construction.
The inquiry into the Donald Dunphy shooting is the latest tenant.
Reade, a former administrator who started teaching at the School for the Deaf in 1975, was leading a charge to have plaques returned to the school façade - one marked its opening and another a visit by Prince Edward.
While those plaques were removed, there remains on the grounds a memorial to the old sanatorium that once occupied the site.
Reade said he and a group of alumni want to see the plaques put back where they were on the brick façade, but even a marking beside the sanatorium plaque "would be something."
After The Telegram looked into the controversy, inquiring with the province and the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District about the issue, the board said late Friday it intends to have the two plaques reinstated next week.
Reade has been cataloging artifacts from the school - including a Steve Jobs-autographed early Apple that he said was bound for the trash when the Department of Education shuttered the school. He wants The Rooms to collect the artifacts.
He said it was only this summer during a come home year, that students realized the plaques had been removed from the school.
So Reade wrote to both Education Minister Dale Kirby and the English School District last month. He has no qualms with it being reused for other things, but lamented removal of its legacy.
"That building has a very important history," said Reade.
Prior to 1964 all children who were classified as Deaf were sent to first Montreal and later to Halifax for their education, Reade noted in his letter to officials.
In 1964, the Smallwood government decided to open a school for Deaf children in Pleasantville and the next year the school was moved to the U.S. barracks built in 1940 at the Torbay airport, Reade said.
In 1987, the students and staff moved into the modern Topsail Road building, but it was closed in 2010 with the province siting a lack of student enrolment.
"This building was much more than a school for four generations of Deaf Newfoundlanders. For some, it was a place of refuge from being bullied as being 'different,'" Reade said. "Through the (school's) home parent program, parents were taught how to communicate with their children and provide them with a basic language of everyday items that hearing children learn incidentally.
"(It) became a home away from home, an educational oasis, a place of acceptance, a recreation center, and most importantly, the introduction to Deaf Culture."
When the building was still known as the School for the Deaf, the Deaf community took pride in visiting and reminiscing about their time there and activities such as theatre productions by and for the Deaf or sports, he said.
"Now that the plaques were removed that dedicated the school by Premier (Brian) Peckford and commemorating the visit by Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex the Deaf community, as a whole, feels as if they have been kicked in the stomach - again," Reade said.
SOURCE - The Telegram
Related Posts: #DeafCanadians
ST. JOHN'S, NL -- The Telegram: John Reade points through windows of the former School for the Deaf and rhymes off classrooms and labs and how they were designed with no obstructions to students' ability to follow instruction.
John Reade recalls the home economics teacher who designed her own classroom and others who contributed ideas that made it easier for the students of the specialized facility.
His voice fills with pride as he recalls the Queen Elizabeth II's visit in the 1990s.
He remembers how he and other staff would visit the site in the mid-1980s when it was under construction and look over the foundation footings, imagining what would be a state of the art facility.
Before moving to Topsail Road, the school was located in an old military building by the airport and the windows would shake when planes took off and landed, wreaking havoc on those students who had hearing aids, he said.
Though many people in St. John's refer to it as the old School for the Deaf, there are no visible markings of that history and Reade said they disappeared two years ago.
The facility has had many uses since the school closed several years ago.
One wing now houses the school lunch program and it's filled in as temporary location for students from schools under construction.
The inquiry into the Donald Dunphy shooting is the latest tenant.
Reade, a former administrator who started teaching at the School for the Deaf in 1975, was leading a charge to have plaques returned to the school façade - one marked its opening and another a visit by Prince Edward.
While those plaques were removed, there remains on the grounds a memorial to the old sanatorium that once occupied the site.
Reade said he and a group of alumni want to see the plaques put back where they were on the brick façade, but even a marking beside the sanatorium plaque "would be something."
After The Telegram looked into the controversy, inquiring with the province and the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District about the issue, the board said late Friday it intends to have the two plaques reinstated next week.
Reade has been cataloging artifacts from the school - including a Steve Jobs-autographed early Apple that he said was bound for the trash when the Department of Education shuttered the school. He wants The Rooms to collect the artifacts.
He said it was only this summer during a come home year, that students realized the plaques had been removed from the school.
So Reade wrote to both Education Minister Dale Kirby and the English School District last month. He has no qualms with it being reused for other things, but lamented removal of its legacy.
"That building has a very important history," said Reade.
Prior to 1964 all children who were classified as Deaf were sent to first Montreal and later to Halifax for their education, Reade noted in his letter to officials.
In 1964, the Smallwood government decided to open a school for Deaf children in Pleasantville and the next year the school was moved to the U.S. barracks built in 1940 at the Torbay airport, Reade said.
In 1987, the students and staff moved into the modern Topsail Road building, but it was closed in 2010 with the province siting a lack of student enrolment.
"This building was much more than a school for four generations of Deaf Newfoundlanders. For some, it was a place of refuge from being bullied as being 'different,'" Reade said. "Through the (school's) home parent program, parents were taught how to communicate with their children and provide them with a basic language of everyday items that hearing children learn incidentally.
"(It) became a home away from home, an educational oasis, a place of acceptance, a recreation center, and most importantly, the introduction to Deaf Culture."
When the building was still known as the School for the Deaf, the Deaf community took pride in visiting and reminiscing about their time there and activities such as theatre productions by and for the Deaf or sports, he said.
"Now that the plaques were removed that dedicated the school by Premier (Brian) Peckford and commemorating the visit by Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex the Deaf community, as a whole, feels as if they have been kicked in the stomach - again," Reade said.
SOURCE - The Telegram
Related Posts: #DeafCanadians
#WheresTheLove Ft. Deaf Community In ASL
#WheresTheLove Ft. Deaf Community - Black Eyed Peas.
This an American Sign Language interpretation of "#Whereisthelove" by Black Eyed Peas Ft the World. We Are a World of Color. One Family. One Bond.
Thank you to Dyer Art Center & SLT for your support from the National Technical Institute of the Deaf and community in America.
A new version "#Whereisthelove" by The Black Eyed Peas featuring The World was released on August 31, 2016, in collaboration with a great number of artists within the music industry. The proceeds of the charity single will go to educational programs.
Produced & Directed By:
Tina Banerjee
Reena Banerjee
Keith Bonilla
Louis Albano
From National Technical Institute of the Deaf.
This an American Sign Language interpretation of "#Whereisthelove" by Black Eyed Peas Ft the World. We Are a World of Color. One Family. One Bond.
Thank you to Dyer Art Center & SLT for your support from the National Technical Institute of the Deaf and community in America.
A new version "#Whereisthelove" by The Black Eyed Peas featuring The World was released on August 31, 2016, in collaboration with a great number of artists within the music industry. The proceeds of the charity single will go to educational programs.
Produced & Directed By:
Tina Banerjee
Reena Banerjee
Keith Bonilla
Louis Albano
From National Technical Institute of the Deaf.
The Deaf Body in Public Space - NY Times
Deaf News: The Deaf Body in Public Space from New York Times.
NEW YORK CITY -- “It’s rude to point,” my friend told me from across the elementary-school cafeteria table. I grasped her words as I read them off her lips. She stared at my index finger, which I held raised in midair, gesturing toward a mutual classmate. “My mom said so.”
I was 6 or 7 years old, but I remember stopping with a jolt. Something inside me froze, too, went suddenly cold.
“I’m signing,” I said out loud. “That’s not rude.”
As the only Deaf student in my elementary school, I had already stumbled across the challenges of straddling two languages and two modes of communication. My family was hearing, but they still empowered me by using both English and sign language at home.
A sign language interpreter accompanied me throughout the day at school, and my teachers created a welcoming environment for me to learn, but finding a place to belong with kids my own age often felt more difficult. I tried to speak to them, and occasionally they reciprocated the effort by learning some basic signs. But usually I felt separate.
I went home that day and asked my mother about what my friend had said. “Don’t worry,” my mother said, “she doesn’t know the social rules are different with signing. You aren’t being rude.” With that, matter-of-fact as always, she brought the conversation to an end. But I still felt a lingering self-consciousness, entirely novel and difficult to shake.
This was perhaps the first time I realized that other people could see me as obtrusive, as taking up too much space, when I was simply communicating just as I was.
When I reflect on this memory two decades later, I recognize how my childhood friend, whom at the time I had found to be so accusatory, had really gaped at me with a sort of wonder. My signing challenged the rules of social conduct she’d absorbed from adults, and to her I must have seemed ignorant or radically rebellious, or perhaps both. But pointing was a truly fundamental act for me; it was how I expressed what my grown-up scholarly self would call relationality - the idea of being in the world in relation to others. Through sign language, a properly poised finger allowed me to say you and me and he and she and they. If I did not point, how could I make a human connection? ... Read More at New York Times.
NEW YORK CITY -- “It’s rude to point,” my friend told me from across the elementary-school cafeteria table. I grasped her words as I read them off her lips. She stared at my index finger, which I held raised in midair, gesturing toward a mutual classmate. “My mom said so.”
I was 6 or 7 years old, but I remember stopping with a jolt. Something inside me froze, too, went suddenly cold.
“I’m signing,” I said out loud. “That’s not rude.”
As the only Deaf student in my elementary school, I had already stumbled across the challenges of straddling two languages and two modes of communication. My family was hearing, but they still empowered me by using both English and sign language at home.
A sign language interpreter accompanied me throughout the day at school, and my teachers created a welcoming environment for me to learn, but finding a place to belong with kids my own age often felt more difficult. I tried to speak to them, and occasionally they reciprocated the effort by learning some basic signs. But usually I felt separate.
I went home that day and asked my mother about what my friend had said. “Don’t worry,” my mother said, “she doesn’t know the social rules are different with signing. You aren’t being rude.” With that, matter-of-fact as always, she brought the conversation to an end. But I still felt a lingering self-consciousness, entirely novel and difficult to shake.
This was perhaps the first time I realized that other people could see me as obtrusive, as taking up too much space, when I was simply communicating just as I was.
When I reflect on this memory two decades later, I recognize how my childhood friend, whom at the time I had found to be so accusatory, had really gaped at me with a sort of wonder. My signing challenged the rules of social conduct she’d absorbed from adults, and to her I must have seemed ignorant or radically rebellious, or perhaps both. But pointing was a truly fundamental act for me; it was how I expressed what my grown-up scholarly self would call relationality - the idea of being in the world in relation to others. Through sign language, a properly poised finger allowed me to say you and me and he and she and they. If I did not point, how could I make a human connection? ... Read More at New York Times.
Deaf Student of CSDR Killed by Gunman
California School for the Deaf, Riverside student killed by gunman after he and friends explain in a text, 'We can't hear you'
LOS ANGELES, California -- The family of a Deaf teen says he was killed Friday night when a gunman approached him and his Deaf friends in Moreno Valley, asked them questions and began shooting as they tried to explain that they couldn’t hear him.
Najai Welch said her brother, DeSean Welch, and his friends were watching a football game at Rancho Verde High School, where the unidentified gunman approached them and began asking questions.
A friend of the dead teen pulled out a cellphone and showed it to the man in effort to explain that they were Deaf and didn’t understand him.
She said the friend wrote, “We are Deaf. We can’t hear you. We don’t understand what you are saying to us.”
The gunman, she said, took the phone and typed out a message, saying he “bangs in this hood,” and then asked the victim if he knew someone who lived in Ontario.
Her brother and friends then left the football game and entered a minivan, Najai Welch said. The group was being followed as the van drove away, she said.
At 9:56 p.m., deputies received a report of shots fired in the intersection of Via De Anza and Camino San Simeon near the high school, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.
When deputies arrived, they found evidence of a shooting but no victims.
At the same time, DeSean Welch’s friends flagged down deputies in the area of Lasselle Street and Iris Avenue, pleading for help because he had been struck by the gunfire.
The 18-year-old Victorville teen was taken to an area hospital, where he later died, deputies said.
Najai Welch thinks the shooting was a case of mistaken identity. She said her brother was never involved in gangs or anything criminal. He was focused on sports and loved basketball, which he hoped to play professionally.
“My brother didn’t deserve that,” she said. “He was a good kid.”
News of the teen’s death left many in the Deaf community stunned.
DeSean Welch attended California School for the Deaf Riverside, and played varsity basketball, according to the school’s athletic department.
Memorials for the teen circulated on social media, and at least one team held a moment of silence for him during its game.
The school’s alumni association said its members were mourning the fallen teen’s death.
“We do not support any violence toward anyone regardless of their backgrounds, their actions or their characters,” the group said in a statement. “We believe anything can be resolved or find solutions. Unfortunately it did not happen with DeSean Welch.”
A family member has created a fundraiser to help pay for his funeral expenses.
Najai Welch is hopeful detectives will find the gunman.
“I just want him to turn himself in,” she said.
SOURCE - Los Angeles Times
UPDATE: According to police, the man shot at the car, killing the teen after being shown a text that read "We are deaf, can't hear you, don't understand what you’re saying to us." - Police Searching For Killer Of Deaf High School Basketball Star.
LOS ANGELES, California -- The family of a Deaf teen says he was killed Friday night when a gunman approached him and his Deaf friends in Moreno Valley, asked them questions and began shooting as they tried to explain that they couldn’t hear him.
Najai Welch said her brother, DeSean Welch, and his friends were watching a football game at Rancho Verde High School, where the unidentified gunman approached them and began asking questions.
A friend of the dead teen pulled out a cellphone and showed it to the man in effort to explain that they were Deaf and didn’t understand him.
She said the friend wrote, “We are Deaf. We can’t hear you. We don’t understand what you are saying to us.”
The gunman, she said, took the phone and typed out a message, saying he “bangs in this hood,” and then asked the victim if he knew someone who lived in Ontario.
Her brother and friends then left the football game and entered a minivan, Najai Welch said. The group was being followed as the van drove away, she said.
At 9:56 p.m., deputies received a report of shots fired in the intersection of Via De Anza and Camino San Simeon near the high school, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.
When deputies arrived, they found evidence of a shooting but no victims.
At the same time, DeSean Welch’s friends flagged down deputies in the area of Lasselle Street and Iris Avenue, pleading for help because he had been struck by the gunfire.
The 18-year-old Victorville teen was taken to an area hospital, where he later died, deputies said.
Najai Welch thinks the shooting was a case of mistaken identity. She said her brother was never involved in gangs or anything criminal. He was focused on sports and loved basketball, which he hoped to play professionally.
“My brother didn’t deserve that,” she said. “He was a good kid.”
News of the teen’s death left many in the Deaf community stunned.
DeSean Welch attended California School for the Deaf Riverside, and played varsity basketball, according to the school’s athletic department.
Memorials for the teen circulated on social media, and at least one team held a moment of silence for him during its game.
The school’s alumni association said its members were mourning the fallen teen’s death.
“We do not support any violence toward anyone regardless of their backgrounds, their actions or their characters,” the group said in a statement. “We believe anything can be resolved or find solutions. Unfortunately it did not happen with DeSean Welch.”
A family member has created a fundraiser to help pay for his funeral expenses.
Najai Welch is hopeful detectives will find the gunman.
“I just want him to turn himself in,” she said.
SOURCE - Los Angeles Times
UPDATE: According to police, the man shot at the car, killing the teen after being shown a text that read "We are deaf, can't hear you, don't understand what you’re saying to us." - Police Searching For Killer Of Deaf High School Basketball Star.
Deaf School Children Sign The 9/11 Story
Deaf school children in Texas use sign language to paint a powerful portrait of what happened on September 11.
NEW YORK CITY -- Teaching 9/11: “To them, it’s history, just like Pearl Harbor,” said Chris Causey, a middle school educator in Robertson County, Tennessee. So, as the memories fade, teachers feel challenged to teach 9/11 in some way that is relevant to all ages in the United States.
Deaf school children in Texas use sign language to paint a powerful portrait of what happened on Sept. 11.
In some schools in New Jersey, third graders learn about the K9 rescue teams while 12th graders discuss methods of prisoner interrogation. In Tennessee, older students at Stratford High School conduct a mock rescue at the World Trade Center; others arrange their desks like the seats of an airplane while Williamson County social studies teacher Kenneth Roeten asks students about their everyday morning routines and compares them to headlines just before the attacks.
“I personally cannot think of any other event in American history that has had more of an impact on how everyday Americans live their life,” Roeten wrote in an email. “It has had a profound impact on my life; therefore, I believe it to be my duty as an educator to never stop teaching the shock, horror, sadness and utter disbelief of that day.”
But how? That's what school systems around the country are wrestling with now.
“I don’t think there’s a school system that has said ‘We’re going to focus on this,'” said Colleen Tambuscio, a teacher at New Milford High School in New Jersey who helped write a 9/11 curriculum through the New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education in collaboration with the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in Manhattan. “I think what has happened in New Jersey - we’ve had moments of silence; we’ve had commemorative acts that were important. But now we should be getting into the educational piece, where we’re doing more with the education. That’s the trajectory.”
The lessons from the curriculum Tambuscio helped write include political and religious discussions; the history and present state of Islamic extremists; the global impact of the day economically; the ensuing wars; the backlash against Muslims; the change in day-to-day security and privacy implications; the huge personal tragedy; as well as stories of the first responders, extraordinary acts by ordinary citizens and the mission of service many felt afterward... Read The Full Story.
Related Documentary:
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Can Deaf People Hear Their Own Thoughts ?
Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
The Deaf Holocaust - Deaf People and Nazi Germany
A&E: Born This Way Presents 'Deaf Out Loud'
NEW YORK CITY -- Teaching 9/11: “To them, it’s history, just like Pearl Harbor,” said Chris Causey, a middle school educator in Robertson County, Tennessee. So, as the memories fade, teachers feel challenged to teach 9/11 in some way that is relevant to all ages in the United States.
Deaf school children in Texas use sign language to paint a powerful portrait of what happened on Sept. 11.
In some schools in New Jersey, third graders learn about the K9 rescue teams while 12th graders discuss methods of prisoner interrogation. In Tennessee, older students at Stratford High School conduct a mock rescue at the World Trade Center; others arrange their desks like the seats of an airplane while Williamson County social studies teacher Kenneth Roeten asks students about their everyday morning routines and compares them to headlines just before the attacks.
“I personally cannot think of any other event in American history that has had more of an impact on how everyday Americans live their life,” Roeten wrote in an email. “It has had a profound impact on my life; therefore, I believe it to be my duty as an educator to never stop teaching the shock, horror, sadness and utter disbelief of that day.”
But how? That's what school systems around the country are wrestling with now.
“I don’t think there’s a school system that has said ‘We’re going to focus on this,'” said Colleen Tambuscio, a teacher at New Milford High School in New Jersey who helped write a 9/11 curriculum through the New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education in collaboration with the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in Manhattan. “I think what has happened in New Jersey - we’ve had moments of silence; we’ve had commemorative acts that were important. But now we should be getting into the educational piece, where we’re doing more with the education. That’s the trajectory.”
The lessons from the curriculum Tambuscio helped write include political and religious discussions; the history and present state of Islamic extremists; the global impact of the day economically; the ensuing wars; the backlash against Muslims; the change in day-to-day security and privacy implications; the huge personal tragedy; as well as stories of the first responders, extraordinary acts by ordinary citizens and the mission of service many felt afterward... Read The Full Story.
Related Documentary:
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
VICE News: Deaf Culture 'Signs of Change'
Can Deaf People Hear Their Own Thoughts ?
Deaf Documentary Film: 9/11 Fear In Silence
The Deaf Holocaust - Deaf People and Nazi Germany
A&E: Born This Way Presents 'Deaf Out Loud'
Booming Cochlear Implants in Indiana State
Deaf News: As more Deaf students use cochlear implants, Indiana schools work to adapt due to gaining popularity.
INDIANAPOLIS, IN -- Public schools in Indiana serve about 2,400 students who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing. Of those students a growing number now use cochlear implants, small medical devices that stimulate nerves in the inner ear and give a sense of hearing.
As technology develops, and cochlear implants become more common, many public schools are still working to catch up.
“I like to think that it’s not malicious, it’s just that most of these smaller districts don’t have the training and the knowledge to really be able to understand what these kids need,” says Ellyn McCall, family liaison at hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana.
As the number of students with cochlear implants grow, advocates like McCall say there’s often a disconnect between services schools offer and services these students need.
Brandy Hauser, of Spencer, IN, had never been more excited. She was a brand new mom. Like all Indiana parents since 1999, she watched as doctors took her newborn daughter Grace for a hearing screening.
Then a nurse came back.
“She [gave] me a little card and said that your daughter didn’t pass the infant hearing screening test,” Hasuer says.
Grace has mondini dysplasia, an inner ear malformation that results in profound deafness.
“After that it was like a whirlwind of ‘What do we do?,’” Hauser says.
For communication, the options can come from two schools of thought.
There’s the well-known route: use sign language. Or the newer option gaining popularity: cochlear implants and spoken language.
Hauser chose the second. At 18 months, Grace had an implant surgically attached to her skull.
“She was sitting in her little car seat stroller. We had her sitting up in there, and they turned her on. It was just like the shine of a Christmas light in her face when she, you know, clapped and she looked,” Hauser says. “It was the first time that I knew, ok, she looked. Ok, we’ve got this.”
But when Grace got to school, things became complicated. Hearing with cochlear implants is not traditional hearing. It takes time to ‘learn to hear.’
“When sentence writing started coming around, and the structure of sentences.. [It] was very hard for her to make a sentence that would be correct,” Hauser says.
Hauser says that’s largely because services from the school district weren’t geared for Deaf kids who, through technology, were also learning to hear and speak.
Instead, the focus was American Sign Language, where grammar is different.
Students like Grace are already outliers in the state. She’s one of nine Deaf or Hard of Hearing students in the Spencer-Ownens Community Schools district of 2,600 students. That’s one-third of one percent of the entire student body.
That’s typical for most Indiana school districts. Public districts, outside of the Indiana School for the Deaf, have eight deaf or hard of hearing students, on average.
Melissa Lancaster heads the organization that provides special education for Grace’s school district, Spencer-Owens Community schools.
“We look at what they’re needing and what services can we provide to meet that,” Lancaster says. “The only challenge is making sure that we’re up to speed on the cochlear implant and what’s needed with that.”
Challenges - and debates - around educating students who are Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing are nothing new to Indiana. Indiana is home to the Indiana School for the Deaf - an institution that specializes in giving students who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing an American Sign Language and English bilingual education.
As technology developed, lawmakers said the ISD was not giving students enough experience in a newly available hearing culture. School officials pushed back, but the state diverted funding from the school to create the Indiana Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Education.
It’s goal? Provide information regarding all communication opportunities to families, from American Sign Language to spoken language.
Deaf or Hard of Hearing students bring their districts about $8,000 each in extra state funding, but advocates say that amount doesn’t necessary cover expensive services that help students with cochlear implants, like therapy, closed-captioning and teacher microphone systems.
“That has to cover lot’s of things,” says Naomi Horton, executive director of hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana. “It’s not enough money in most cases to cover the special education costs.”
But there’s a catch. Under federal law, school districts are obligated to provide all students with a free and adequate education. In other words, they can’t say a necessary special education accommodation is beyond their budget. And she says, that can put cash-strapped schools in a tricky position.
Ellyn McCall, the family liason at Hear Indiana, says it makes a big difference when services are tailored for children with cochlear implants. She says it has made a big difference for her son Seth.
Today, Seth is 8 years old. He’s in a traditional classroom, and says he learns things like the definition of “busybody.”
“‘Busybody’ is when you’re being nosy and you’re listening to someone else’s conversation,” Seth says.
Because there is evidence that early services can mean big results for students like Seth in the long run, some parents don’t want to wait for their districts to provide them.
Kendra Bowden’s son Wyatt has cochlear implants. On his third birthday, Bowden says he still had the language skills of a child half his age.
Bowden lives in Terre Haute, but she decided to send Wyatt to St. Joseph Institute for the Deaf, a private school that specializes in educating children with cochlear implants. It’s in Indianapolis. An hour and a half away.
“We didn’t want to actually send him because it’s far for us, it’s far for him it’s hard on him it’s hard on us, he’s our baby he’s never even been to daycare,” Bowden said. “But that school is only there for preschool.”
It’s almost seven hours total of driving there and back, to and from school each day. But Bowden hopes it will be worth it after preschool.
“I think it’s gonna be worth it in the long run,” Bowden said. “It’s not forever, it’s maybe a couple of years.”
Studies show getting children with cochlear implants specialized services early can be worth if for the state financially, too. The state can save over $200,000 per student that would otherwise go to state services, like special education and auditory rehabilitation.
SOURCE - WBAA
INDIANAPOLIS, IN -- Public schools in Indiana serve about 2,400 students who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing. Of those students a growing number now use cochlear implants, small medical devices that stimulate nerves in the inner ear and give a sense of hearing.
As technology develops, and cochlear implants become more common, many public schools are still working to catch up.
“I like to think that it’s not malicious, it’s just that most of these smaller districts don’t have the training and the knowledge to really be able to understand what these kids need,” says Ellyn McCall, family liaison at hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana.
As the number of students with cochlear implants grow, advocates like McCall say there’s often a disconnect between services schools offer and services these students need.
Brandy Hauser, of Spencer, IN, had never been more excited. She was a brand new mom. Like all Indiana parents since 1999, she watched as doctors took her newborn daughter Grace for a hearing screening.
Then a nurse came back.
“She [gave] me a little card and said that your daughter didn’t pass the infant hearing screening test,” Hasuer says.
Grace has mondini dysplasia, an inner ear malformation that results in profound deafness.
“After that it was like a whirlwind of ‘What do we do?,’” Hauser says.
For communication, the options can come from two schools of thought.
There’s the well-known route: use sign language. Or the newer option gaining popularity: cochlear implants and spoken language.
Hauser chose the second. At 18 months, Grace had an implant surgically attached to her skull.
“She was sitting in her little car seat stroller. We had her sitting up in there, and they turned her on. It was just like the shine of a Christmas light in her face when she, you know, clapped and she looked,” Hauser says. “It was the first time that I knew, ok, she looked. Ok, we’ve got this.”
But when Grace got to school, things became complicated. Hearing with cochlear implants is not traditional hearing. It takes time to ‘learn to hear.’
“When sentence writing started coming around, and the structure of sentences.. [It] was very hard for her to make a sentence that would be correct,” Hauser says.
Hauser says that’s largely because services from the school district weren’t geared for Deaf kids who, through technology, were also learning to hear and speak.
Instead, the focus was American Sign Language, where grammar is different.
Students like Grace are already outliers in the state. She’s one of nine Deaf or Hard of Hearing students in the Spencer-Ownens Community Schools district of 2,600 students. That’s one-third of one percent of the entire student body.
That’s typical for most Indiana school districts. Public districts, outside of the Indiana School for the Deaf, have eight deaf or hard of hearing students, on average.
Melissa Lancaster heads the organization that provides special education for Grace’s school district, Spencer-Owens Community schools.
“We look at what they’re needing and what services can we provide to meet that,” Lancaster says. “The only challenge is making sure that we’re up to speed on the cochlear implant and what’s needed with that.”
Challenges - and debates - around educating students who are Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing are nothing new to Indiana. Indiana is home to the Indiana School for the Deaf - an institution that specializes in giving students who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing an American Sign Language and English bilingual education.
As technology developed, lawmakers said the ISD was not giving students enough experience in a newly available hearing culture. School officials pushed back, but the state diverted funding from the school to create the Indiana Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Education.
It’s goal? Provide information regarding all communication opportunities to families, from American Sign Language to spoken language.
Deaf or Hard of Hearing students bring their districts about $8,000 each in extra state funding, but advocates say that amount doesn’t necessary cover expensive services that help students with cochlear implants, like therapy, closed-captioning and teacher microphone systems.
“That has to cover lot’s of things,” says Naomi Horton, executive director of hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana. “It’s not enough money in most cases to cover the special education costs.”
But there’s a catch. Under federal law, school districts are obligated to provide all students with a free and adequate education. In other words, they can’t say a necessary special education accommodation is beyond their budget. And she says, that can put cash-strapped schools in a tricky position.
Ellyn McCall, the family liason at Hear Indiana, says it makes a big difference when services are tailored for children with cochlear implants. She says it has made a big difference for her son Seth.
Today, Seth is 8 years old. He’s in a traditional classroom, and says he learns things like the definition of “busybody.”
“‘Busybody’ is when you’re being nosy and you’re listening to someone else’s conversation,” Seth says.
Because there is evidence that early services can mean big results for students like Seth in the long run, some parents don’t want to wait for their districts to provide them.
Kendra Bowden’s son Wyatt has cochlear implants. On his third birthday, Bowden says he still had the language skills of a child half his age.
Bowden lives in Terre Haute, but she decided to send Wyatt to St. Joseph Institute for the Deaf, a private school that specializes in educating children with cochlear implants. It’s in Indianapolis. An hour and a half away.
“We didn’t want to actually send him because it’s far for us, it’s far for him it’s hard on him it’s hard on us, he’s our baby he’s never even been to daycare,” Bowden said. “But that school is only there for preschool.”
It’s almost seven hours total of driving there and back, to and from school each day. But Bowden hopes it will be worth it after preschool.
“I think it’s gonna be worth it in the long run,” Bowden said. “It’s not forever, it’s maybe a couple of years.”
Studies show getting children with cochlear implants specialized services early can be worth if for the state financially, too. The state can save over $200,000 per student that would otherwise go to state services, like special education and auditory rehabilitation.
SOURCE - WBAA
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Most Viewed Last 30 Days
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Discussing the concept of Intersectionality and how this relates to the current controversy surrounding Angela McCaskill . Reference: htt...
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Prank and Spank, Annette and Scott Kerr has announced that possibly leaving YouTube. The tubers entertaining Deaf couple Annette and Sco...
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Jehovah's Witnesses' ASL version "Stop Masturbating" under fire for misleading signs with facial expressions and body lang...
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Mavrick Fisher's preliminary hearing for murder of Grant Whitaker. LAKEPORT, California -- A Deaf man charged with killing his partn...
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Parental guidance is advised, The content may contain R-rated material, nudity and profanity not suitable for anyone under the age of 18. ...
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An Omaha girl died of bacterial meningitis over the weekend after deteriorating very quickly. OMAHA, Nebraska -- Katie Engle, 7, was a se...
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The U.S. Winter Olympics Deaf Speedskater, Michael W. Hubbs arrested and mugshot for probation violation in Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah --...
Most Viewed Of All Time
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An Omaha girl died of bacterial meningitis over the weekend after deteriorating very quickly. OMAHA, Nebraska -- Katie Engle, 7, was a se...
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The U.S. Winter Olympics Deaf Speedskater, Michael W. Hubbs arrested and mugshot for probation violation in Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah --...
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Democratic Vice President Joe Biden mocking an ASL interpreter. DANVILLE, Virginia -- Vice President of the United States of America Joe B...
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Parental guidance is advised, The content may contain R-rated material, nudity and profanity not suitable for anyone under the age of 18. ...
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Jehovah's Witnesses' ASL version "Stop Masturbating" under fire for misleading signs with facial expressions and body lang...
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Deaf Protest will be held at the White House in Washington the District of Columbia on Sept. 5th and 6th 2015. WASHINGTON -- President Ob...
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SportsMX - Kitchen Talk: "The Ugly Truth" Interview With Ricky Taylor. The premiere of Kitchen Talk show from SportsMX . This ...
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The Comedy Central Roast of Donald Trump - Marlee Matlin and Gilbert Gottfried were incredibly hilarious performances. NEW YORK CITY -- M...
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Deaf News: Michael W. Hubbs announced that he was hositpalized by stress symptoms. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah -- Michael (Mike) Hubbs of short...
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