Showing posts with label Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Show all posts

Making Video Games Better For The Deaf

Designing for Disability: Making games better for the Deaf.


Game Maker's Toolki, hosted by Mark Brown, a series about video game design on YouTube channel. Video games are for everyone. But disabled people can be left out if developers don’t consider their needs.

To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.

In this series of videos, Mark Brown will be sharing guidelines and best practices for making games more accessible to a wide range of disabilities. Starting with auditory options, for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.

Sources:
How Ubisoft is Putting the Spotlight on Accessibility-Bungie https://news.ubisoft.com/article/how-ubisoft-is-putting-the-spotlight-on-accessibility

Resources:
Game accessibility guidelines http://gameaccessibilityguidelines.com
BBC Subtitle Guidelines http://bbc.github.io/subtitle-guidelines
Netflix Subtitle Guidelines https://partnerhelp.netflixstudios.com/hc/en-us/articles/215758617-Timed-Text-Style-Guide-General-Requirements
Deaf Game Reviews http://oneoddgamergirl.net
AbleGamers http://www.ablegamers.org
 What Video Game Subtitling Got Wrong In 2017:
Max Deryagin https://www.md-subs.com/what-game-subs-got-wrong-in-2017

SOURCE

Texas Police Hires First Deaf Female Officer

A Texas woman is making history after being sworn in as the state's first Deaf female police officer.


DALHART, Texas -- History is made in the Lone Star State. The newest recruit for the Dalhart Police Department becomes the first Deaf female police officer.

Her name is Erica Trevino and she's dreamed of being an officer since she was in kindergarten. But growing up, people told her she couldn't achieve her goal because of her disability. Today she proved them wrong as she was officially sworn in with Dalhart Police Department.

To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.

"I'm ready to get to work," said Ofc. Erica Trevino after her swearing-in. It's that same drive and tenacity that led Chief David Conner to look past her disability and discover her special qualities. And that list is a long one.

"I believe she can do the job just like any other other police officer," said David Conner, Dalhart Police Chief. "She has proven time and time again that she can and will overcome those obstacles. She has her bachelor's degree in forensic science, she graduated 3rd from her class in the Academy, she's very intelligent and articulate."

Despite speaking English, Officer Trevino speaks some Spanish and is able to sign in five different languages including Spanish and Japanese. But there's one word she didn't pick up.

"People told me no because I was deaf," said Ofc. Trevino.

"So we've learned a long time ago not to tell Erica no," said Cindi Trevino, Erica's mom.

"She hasn't let life stand in her way, so who am I tell her she can't do it. Give her a chance," said Chief Conner.

Despite her impressive set of skills, the critics and naysayers remained. But so did Erica's resilience.

To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.

"I just realized I'm not going to let anyone tell me what I can do and what I cannot do. So I decided to become a police officer. It's been a long, hard path, but here I am," said Ofc. Trevino.

Her first day is April 14th. Chief Conner said he's created special procedures to help Trevino with communication. She is able to hear calls over the police radio but dispatch will also text all calls to her phone.

The department bought a special cell phone to help with that. Plus, Trevino will also have a partner during her shifts.

Officer Trevino has been Deaf her entire life and has had to overcome stereotypes. She made history today, but she's just getting started. She said her next goal is to join the department's Criminal Investigation Department.

SOURCE - MyHighPlains.com

Related Police Officers:
NYPD Officer Raised By Deaf Parents
Texas Police Hires First Deaf Female Officer
Deaf Police Officers Fight Crime
Deaf Police To Monitor Security Cameras

Related Posts: #PoliceBrutality - #PoliceOfficers

Ava - New App For Deaf & Hard of Hearing

Introducing Ava: 24/7 accessible conversations with Deaf & Hard of Hearing people.


Ava is the fastest and easiest way to understand and participate in conversations for Deaf & Hard of Hearing people.



- Didn’t get what the guy in front of you said? Ava uses your microphone to hear and shows you word by word what is said. Instant captions, in your pocket, always available.

- Tell something super quickly: show in big letters what you meant, or ask Ava to voice it for you. The easiest 2-way communication with hearing people who don’t know sign language.

- Don’t miss out in group conversations anymore. Share your unique "&AvaID" link with others so they can join your conversation on their Ava app. At lunch, in meetings or hanging out with friends, Ava shows you who says what, in real time, and in colors.

- Connect quickly one or multiple friends, next to you or anywhere in the world. It takes one tap to connect you all.

- Join the other Ava Pioneers exploring every day new ways to use Ava to make the world more accessible. Ava 1.0 is just the first step towards a 24/7 accessible world. Visit https://ava.me/life for more details on how other Pioneers use Ava.

- Experience the first artificial intelligence designed to empower Deaf & Hard of Hearing people. Anyone can tap on words that Ava got wrong to teach her. Ava gets smarter at understanding you & your peers’ voice.

- Benefit from the different optimizations we’ve done: Ava will not use more battery than streaming audio when listening to transcribe, or using other reading app when you follow the conversation.

Find all of the latest Ava news on our Twitter account - https://twitter.com/avascribe or Facebook page - https://facebook.com/avadotme

SOURCE - Ava

Related Deaf Apps:
Deaf Community Discover The App 'Glide'
Convo Lights App Connected Philips Hue
New App Features For Deaf Uber Drivers
Ava - New App For Deaf & Hard of Hearing

The Case For Bilingual Deaf Children - UConn

UConn researchers want to understand the science behind how early access to language affects learning in Deaf and Hearing children.


MANSFIELD, CT -- UConn Today: Marie Coppola and a number of other researchers at UConn want to understand the science behind how early access to language affects learning in Deaf and Hearing children. Deaf children are just as intellectually capable as hearing children – but if they do not have early access to language and communication, that intellectual capacity can quickly erode.

Eight-year-old Marie Coppola could hear the dial tone on the other end of the phone. Second ring … third ring. She was a little clammy, but not as nervous as the first few times she’d picked up and dialed on this sunny Philadelphia afternoon.

A middle-aged woman’s voice answered. “Hello?”

“Hello,” Coppola said, affecting what she thought was a deep, confident tone. “I’m calling about your ad in the Inquirer for cleaning services.”

The woman was not fooled. “Excuse me?” she began testily.

“It’s for my mother,” Coppola rushed on. “She’s deaf, but she is highly qualified and can provide references. If you’d like to meet her, I can arrange it. She’s available any afternoon this week …”

Amy Coppola, standing with a hand on her daughter’s shoulder, looked on. Her daughter trailed off, eyebrows furrowed. She tried a few more cajoling words, but finally mumbled, “Okay, thank you,” and hung up.

Her mother didn’t need to ask. “Better luck next time?” she signed.

“Yes,” signed Marie. She trudged across the room, disgruntled.

“I’m going to my room. I’ll be back for dinner,” she signed – in the Deaf custom of telling people where you’re going when you leave, and when you’ll be back – before disappearing down the hall.

Forty years later, Marie Coppola, now assistant professor of psychological sciences and linguistics in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, is still disgruntled. Even today, amid a surge of technology that promises to give Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing people access to sound, Coppola says Deaf people, along with their language and their culture, are not being heard.

Coppola was recently awarded a $1.2 million National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award, one of the largest in the program’s history, to study the impact of early language experiences – whether spoken or signed – on how children learn. She hopes her work will help people better understand that sign language is just as worthy as spoken language... Read More: HERE.

Overview Of The Kansas School For The Deaf

WATCH [CC] - KS School for the Deaf - A resource for Deafness since 1861.


Learn about the Kansas School for the Deaf, located in Olathe, KS. and serving Deaf and Hard of Hearing children from across the state of Kansas.


Kansas School for the Deaf Social Network:
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/kansasschoolforthedeaf
Facebook - https://facebook.com/kansasschoolforthedeaf
Linkedin - https://linkedin.com/company/kansasschoolforthedeaf
Website - http://www.ksdeaf.org

Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - List of schools for the Deaf

Related Posts: #DeafSchools

Winnipeg Most Racist City In Canada: Maclean's

Welcome to Winnipeg, where Canada's racism problem is at its worst.


WINNIPEG, Manitoba -- Maclean's magazine has labelled Winnipeg the most racist city in Canada.

How the death of Tina Fontaine has finally forced it to face its festering race problem, by associate editor Nancy Macdonald published the magazine, "Welcome to Winnipeg, Canada: Where Canada's racism problem is at its worst" into public and the Canadians and Winnipeggers find out quite shocked that Winnipeg is Canada's most racist city.


To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.

The Aboriginal community of Deaf and Hard of Hearing does feel the same manner as aboriginal people as well. There appears "Deaf" on the article which Tina Fountine's former boyfriend, who is Deaf, quote: "Her boyfriend was Deaf; the pair communicated by texting." Maclean's.

Winnipeg's racism problem is at its worst - Nancy Macdonald:

“Oh Goddd how long are aboriginal people going to use what happened as a crutch to suck more money out of Canadians?” Winnipeg teacher Brad Badiuk wrote on Facebook last month. “They have contributed NOTHING to the development of Canada. Just standing with their hand out. Get to work, tear the treaties and shut the FK up already. Why am I on the hook for their cultural support?”

Another day in Winnipeg, another hateful screed against the city’s growing indigenous population. This one from a teacher (now on paid administrative leave) at Kelvin High School, long considered among the city’s progressive schools - alma mater to just about every Winipegger of note, from Marshall McLuhan to Izzy Asper, Fred Penner and Neil Young.

Badiuk’s comments came to light the day Rinelle Harper - the shy 16-year-old indigenous girl left for dead in the city’s Assiniboine River after a brutal sexual assault - spoke publicly for the first time after her recovery. She called for an inquiry to help explain why so many indigenous girls and women are being murdered in Winnipeg, and elsewhere in Canada.

Badiuk’s comments came while the city was still reeling from the murder of Tina Fontaine, a 15-year-old child from the Sagkeeng First Nation who was wrapped in plastic and tossed into the Red River after being sexually exploited in the city’s core.

They came after Nunavummiuq musician Tanya Tagaq, last year’s Polaris Music Prize winner, who complained that while out to lunch in downtown Winnipeg where she was performing with the city’s ballet this fall, “a man started following me calling me a ‘sexy little Indian’ and asking to fuck.”

They came the very week an inquest issued its findings in the death of Brian Sinclair, an indigenous 45-year-old who died from an entirely treatable infection after being ignored for 34 hours in a city ER.

They came in the wake of a civic election dominated by race relations after a racist rant by a frontrunner’s wife went viral: “I’m really tired of getting harassed by the drunken native guys” downtown, Gord Steeves’s wife, Lori, wrote on Facebook. “We all donate enough money to keep their sorry asses on welfare, so shut the fuck up and don’t ask me for another handout!” The former city councillor and long-serving, centrist politician didn’t bother apologizing. He lost, but not because of this.

For decades, the friendly Prairie city has been known for its smiling, lefty premiers, pacifist, Mennonite writers and a love affair with the Jets. Licence plates here bear the tag “Friendly Manitoba.” But events of last fall served to expose a darker reality. The Manitoba capital is deeply divided along ethnic lines. It manifestly does not provide equal opportunity for Aboriginals. And it is quickly becoming known for the subhuman treatment of its First Nations citizens, who suffer daily indignities and appalling violence. Winnipeg is arguably becoming Canada’s most racist city...

Read The Full Story.

There is the shadow of racism will rightly continue to hang over Winnipeg.

Related Deaf Winnipeggers:
Deaf 'Peg Faced 'Disrespect' During Traffic Stops
Deaf-Blind Housing Project In Winnipeg, Canada
Study on Sarcasm and American Sign Language
Deaf Canadian's Gallaudet Dream
Manitoba Deaf Athletes To Get More Sign Language Help
Manitoba Swimmer At Deaflympics
Deaf Homeless Man In Compassionate Gesture
Deaf Canadian Curling Champion Dies

CRTC Approves Video Relay Service In Canada

CRTC announces the Deaf and Hard of Hearing people across Canada will have access to new video relay service.


OTTAWA, Ontario -- The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC announced on April 22, 2014, that video relay services (VRS) will now be available in Canada for Deaf people who communicate in American Sign Language ASL and Langue des signes québécoise LSQ.

Video relay services enable callers to use the services of a sign language interpreter through the Internet. The interpreter interprets spoken English into sign for the deaf caller, and voices into English the signs of the Deaf caller.


“Many Canadians who are Deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired learn American Sign Language or Langue des signes québécoise early in life," Peter Menzies, Vice-Chairman of Telecommunications, and Chairman of the hearing panel.

"In many cases, neither English nor French is their first language. Video relay service will make it possible for them to communicate in sign language with ease, whether it’s to make a doctor’s appointment, speak to a friend or make any other type of call. At the same time, we are taking the necessary steps to ensure that this service is introduced in an efficient manner and as quickly as possible.”

Users will require their own high-speed Internet service and a device connected to the Internet such as a smartphone, tablet, computer, or videophone. Additional services such as call display and voicemail will be billed at rates similar to those charged by other service providers.

An independent administrator will be created to supervise the implementation and provision of video relay services and ensure that the views of users are taken into account during the decision-making process. The CRTC will review the video relay service three years after it has been launched to determine whether the service is efficiently meeting the needs of Canadians.

The CRTC is requiring that VRS become available to Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing or speech impaired as early as the fall of 2015. The VRS service is offered at no charge, but users must sign up to use it. People who want to use the service can use their own phone number to access VRS. An estimated 20,000 Canadians will be the primary users of VRS... Read More.

Chris Kenopic Vlog On CRTC VRS Announcement:


"CRTC announces that Deaf, hard of hearing or speech impaired people across Canada will have access to new telecommunications services in 2015! Chris Kenopic, president and CEO of the Canadian Hearing Society, delivers a vlog on VRS in Canada."

What If... The Quest for VRS in Canada:


"The BCVRS Committee has co-produced a short documentary-drama film with Lenois Productions. It speaks directly to the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunication Commissioners about the reality of TTY vs. VRS in the Deaf community of Canada."

Funding to support video relay service in Canada will be taken from the National Contribution Fund, and will be capped at CAD 30 million annually. To ensure the perspectives of users are reflected in the decision making process, an independent administrator will be created to oversee the implementation and provision of video relay service... Read More.

Related Canada VRS:
CRTC Launches Canada Video Relay Service
CRTC Approves Video Relay Service In Canada
Deaf Canadians Launches VRS Petition
Deaf Canadians Put Pressure On CRTC
Canada VRS Rally

Related Video Relay Service:
Exclusive Interview Ed Bosson 'Father of VRS'
Video Relay Service For Deaf - Phone Sex Scene
Fapping Guy Calls Deaf Video Service 4,000 Times

Related Posts: #VideoRelayService

Police Brutality: Driving While Deaf

Police Brutality: Driving While Deaf By Advocacy Group Deaf Rights.


OKLAHOMA CITY -- In January 2014, Pearl Pearson, age 64, was pulled over by Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers. He says he signaled he was Deaf and placed his hands on the steering wheel when state patrolmen brutally assaulted him for not following verbal orders he couldn't hear.

The district attorney announced that the patrolmen involved would not be charged for this brutal attack on the same day that he charged Pearson who has two sons who are police officers with resisting arrest. The footage from this video is actual video of what happened to Pearson that night in January.


Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident. When police officers don't realize Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing people can't hear them, it has led to police officers brutally assaulting deaf people and other tragedies.

We are calling on the Department of Justice to conduct trainings with local police departments on how to better interact with the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. For more information, go to https://www.aclu.org/deafrights.

Marlee Matlin On Deaf And Police Interaction in American Sign Language:

Actress Marlee Matlin, who is Deaf and the wife of a police officer, teamed up with ACLU and advocacy group HEARD, on an American Sign Language video to ensure Deaf people know their rights when interacting with law enforcement.

When police officers don't realize Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing people can't hear them, it has led to police officers brutally assaulting Deaf people and other tragedies.

While this video aims to ensure that Deaf people know their rights, they can only do so much. It is the responsibility of police departments to ensure that their officers are adequately trained.


We are calling on the Department of Justice to conduct trainings with local police departments on how to better interact with the Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing. For more information, go to https://www.aclu.org/deafrights

Note: During interrogations, the ADA requires qualified interpreters, but certified interpreters should always be used where they are available.

Related Police Brutality: #PoliceBrutality
Police Pepper Sprays Deaf Man
Deaf Man Shot, Killed By Louisiana Deputy
Police Shoot, Kill Deaf Man After Order To Stop
Deaf Man Shot, Killed By Oklahoma City Police
Protest For Deaf Man Who Was Shot By Police
Police Brutality: Driving While Deaf
Deaf Elderly Man Brutally Beaten By Police
Police Brutality On A Deaf Man In India
Police Brutality Against Deaf People
Deaf Man Parked Illegally, Slapped Officer
Deaf In America - Black And Deaf
Marlee Matlin On Deaf And Police Interaction
Deaf Protesters Complains of Police Brutality
Deaf Advocates Responds On Police Brutality
Stop Doing That! With Nyle DiMarco

Marlee Matlin On Deaf And Police Interaction

Marlee Matlin On Deaf And Police Interaction in American Sign Language.

Actress Marlee Matlin, who is Deaf and the wife of a police officer, teamed up with ACLU and advocacy group HEARD, on an American Sign Language video to ensure Deaf people know their rights when interacting with law enforcement.

When police officers don't realize Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing people can't hear them, it has led to police officers brutally assaulting Deaf people and other tragedies.


While this video aims to ensure that Deaf people know their rights, they can only do so much. It is the responsibility of police departments to ensure that their officers are adequately trained.

We are calling on the Department of Justice to conduct trainings with local police departments on how to better interact with the Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing. For more information, go to https://www.aclu.org/deafrights.

"Driving While Deaf."

In January 2014, Pearl Pearson, age 64, was pulled over by Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers. He says he signaled he was Deaf and placed his hands on the steering wheel when state patrolmen brutally assaulted him for not following verbal orders he couldn't hear.

The district attorney announced that the patrolmen involved would not be charged for this brutal attack on the same day that he charged Pearson who has two sons who are police officers with resisting arrest.

This footage is actual video of what happened to Pearson that night.


Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident. When police officers don't realize Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing people can't hear them, it has led to police officers brutally assaulting Deaf people and other tragedies.

We are calling on the Department of Justice to conduct trainings with local police departments on how to better interact with the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. For more information, go to https://www.aclu.org/deafrights.

Note: During interrogations, the ADA requires qualified interpreters, but certified interpreters should always be used where they are available.

Related Police Brutality: #PoliceBrutality
Police Pepper Sprays Deaf Man
Deaf Man Shot, Killed By Louisiana Deputy
Police Shoot, Kill Deaf Man After Order To Stop
Deaf Man Shot, Killed By Oklahoma City Police
Protest For Deaf Man Who Was Shot By Police
Police Brutality: Driving While Deaf
Deaf Elderly Man Brutally Beaten By Police
Police Brutality On A Deaf Man In India
Police Brutality Against Deaf People
Deaf Man Parked Illegally, Slapped Officer
Deaf In America - Black And Deaf
Marlee Matlin On Deaf And Police Interaction
Deaf Protesters Complains of Police Brutality
Deaf Advocates Responds On Police Brutality
Stop Doing That! With Nyle DiMarco

Fair Housing Videos For The Deaf

Fair Housing Videos for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.

This is an introduction to the Fair Housing Video Series for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. This is a series of 12 videos that was Developed with funding from a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development under the Fair Housing Initiatives Program. The videos were produced by the National Fair Housing Alliance and Disability Independence Group. Special thanks to Sweetwater Media for the filming of these videos.


The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is pleased to announce the creation of 12 videos in American Sign Language (ASL) with English captioning.

Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity for the Deaf - This is video 9 of 12 in the Fair Housing Video Series for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. It provides information about fair housing for the Deaf and describes common problems faced by persons who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing in the buying, renting, and use of a home.


Follow @DisabilityIndependenceGroupInc:
Website: https://fairhousingdeafvideos.com
Subscribe: https://youtube.com/channel/disabilityindependencegroup

Featured Post

The Most Googled Questions About Being Deaf

Do not make the work of Deaf YouVideo content look like your own. Give credit where it is due and requires that articles be based on reliable published sources.

Posts Archive

Most Viewed Last 7 Days

Most Viewed Last 30 Days

Most Viewed Of All Time

That Deaf Guy Comic

About This Site

Deaf YouVideo is public web site and a free assessment for everyone. A public web site is a web site that you can use to have a presence on the internet. It is a public facing site to attract customers and partners, and it usually includes increase traffic. Feel free to exploring the online community - Deaf, Hearing-Impairment, Hearing-Loss, Sign Language, News, Events, Societies, Resources, Links, Videos, Vloggers and much more. Be sure to Bookmarks this website.

Submitted content, to whom it may concern of posting on this site: YouPrivacy


Videos and Channels Powered By YouTube

RSS Feed Content

Deaf YouVideo provided by YouTube, Blogger, Google Feedburner, RSS Feed are a way for websites large and small to distribute their content as well beyond just visitors using browsers. The feed icon feeds permit subscription to regular updates, delivered automatically via a web portal, news reader vlogs or blogs and etc. Submitted content and/or disabled by request consume content and will be immediately removed from Deaf YouVideo. If you see the content appears "error, blank, and feed not support", click home or refresh your browsers.

Powered by FeedBurner

Copyright © 2020 Deaf YouVideo All Rights Reserved.
Deaf YouVideo. Powered by Blogger.
 
page contents