Sunday, September 18, 2011

Blog #2: What is Deaf Culture?


Please read the variety of articles and respond to the questions below.

Information taken from:
http://library.thinkquest.org/11942/deafculture.html

Deaf Culture

When thinking about deaf culture, realize there is a barrier dividing people who are deaf from hearing people, and it is communication. A large portion of deaf culture revolves around this fact of life. Lack of communication inhibits the interaction between people. So, to overcome this, many people who are deaf key in on socialization. Deaf people are famous for "DST," Deaf Standard Time. That is, the Deaf have a tendency to be late because they like to chat for long periods of time.

However, not Deaf are involved with the Deaf Community. Not all people who are deaf, especially young deaf children of hearing parents, have access to -- or even know -- other people who are deaf. Nine out of every ten deaf children are born from hearing parents who have no experience or knowledge of the deaf community. There are deaf children whose parents do not know Sign Language. And, there are deaf children who do not know other deaf children. Many have a hard time making good friends because they either don't have the opportunity or they don't share the same language with other children. We feel it is important, like many other deaf sites on the Internet, to raise awareness about these issues.

Deaf Communities are extremely tight knit worlds that exist to preserve friendships and interaction. Deaf Communities also serve as a rallying point to create the political strength the Deaf need to lobby for the support they need from the larger community. Schools for the Deaf provide a center for the community, an emotional core, if you will. These schools are considered extremely important and essential to the well being of individuals as well as the group. Deaf Communities are quick to act if anything threatens their school funding. Also, religion often plays a large role in the lives of the deaf, because they provide opportunities for interaction. An announced sporting event for the Deaf can draw thousands from all over, not so much for the sport but for the socialization. Deaf people like to hang around a lot of the same places where they know that they would find other deaf people, such as coffeehouses and movie houses that play open-captioned movies.

Identity is another important issue with the Deaf Community and individuals who are deaf. They question the common notion: "Are deaf really handicapped?" They say "No!" It is important to all deaf that to remain strong and independent. They want to prove deafs can make it in the world, and they often give themselves and each other encouragement to develop the confidence to make it as whole and independent people in the world. The only thing they can't do is hear. If they have the benefit of a good education and develop their skills, the Deaf can function as well as anyone else.


The Deaf are very straightforward and uninhibited in the way they communicate with each other, and with all other people as well. They don't "pussy-foot" around. Sometimes this directness comes off as seeming rude. Hearing people tend to cover up their true meaning more than the Deaf do. This confuses communication. The Deaf read the body language before the words, so most of the time they know the real meaning even when the words don't match up. The words confuse the meaning, and makes it difficult to communicate.

Historically the Deaf have been one of the world's repressed minorities. In times past, the Deaf were often referred to in negative ways. Today sensitive and informed people use positive language that recognizes, and values, the differences. Deaf people are "people" first and "deaf" second. Being "deaf" does NOT make one "dumb". People who are deaf are very sensitive to any put down, and rightfully so.

Even though the Deaf in America all have regional, even school, differences or they were taught a variety of different language systems growing up, once people who are deaf get together they quickly find a common ground in language so they can communicate with each other. This is usually ASL. The Deaf all over the world are very flexible with each other because they value so much the chance to form real, meaningful relationships. The Deaf pick up what others are saying by starting with very gestural signs that look much like what they mean. Sometimes these signs are called "iconic" (like "icon" pictures used to represent actions on the computer). Sign language can be very efficient and the Deaf are able to learn variations in each other's systems quickly. Deafs tend to joke that it would be better for the world's sake if each country's diplomats were Deaf, because they can find ways to resolve their differences, come together, and be strong. The Deaf could do the world good!
LISTENING IN ON DEAF CULTURE



Information taken from:
http://www.colorado.edu/journals/standards/V5N2/AWARD/halpern2.html
Listening In On Deaf Culture



Ideally, this article would be written by a Deaf person. It seems only logical to me that a member of any culture is better than an outsider at understanding and explaining the complexities of that culture. So in a sense, I write this article for other outsiders--hearing people who may never have realized that there is such a thing as Deaf Culture. To keep this essay coherent, I have used "deaf" to refer to a physical characteristic and "Deaf" to refer to cultural identity.

STANDARDS Editorial Note: The section headings in this article link to related sites on Deaf culture.



by Carla A. Halpern




In mainstream American society, we tend to approach deafness as a defect. Helen Keller is alleged to have said, "Blindness cuts people off from things; deafness cuts people off from people." This seems a very accurate description of what Keller's world must have been. We as hearing people tend to pity deaf people, or, if they "succeed" in the hearing world, admire them for overcoming a severe handicap. We tend to look at signing as an inferior substitute for "real" communication (let alone language!). We assume that all deaf people will try to lip-read and we applaud deaf people, such as Marlee Matlin, who use their voices to show us how far they have come from the grips of their disability. Finally, when we hear about devices such as the cochlear implant, we joyously hail them as hopeful signs that we can some day eradicate deafness altogether.

Given this climate, many hearing people are surprised, as I was at first, to learn of the existence of Deaf culture. Imagine -- deafness not as a defect, but as a source of connection! Imagine yourself deaf, growing up with a beautiful language, visual literature, humor, and theater. Imagine taking pride in your identity without any desire to become a member of the majority culture. For many deaf people, their community is a comforting relief from the isolation and condescension of the hearing world. But the Deaf community is far more than a "support group" for people who share a physical characteristic.

Members of the Deaf community may have hearing levels that range from profoundly deaf to slightly hard-of-hearing. But no members of the Deaf community are "hearing impaired." Inside this community, deaf people become Deaf, proudly capitalizing their culture. Hearing people suddenly find that they are handicapped: "Deaf-impaired."

Quite a different perspective, isn't it?

My own introduction to Deaf culture grew out of graduate studies in linguistics. I had always been curious about sign language, but had no idea that it would lead me into a completely new world--into a culture which has survived profound oppression, discrimination, and tragedy. The language and history I learned were colorful but painful at times: I learned of the turn-of-the-century Milan conference, at which all kinds of sign language were targeted for annihilation--and the resulting case histories of deaf children denied education; growing up illiterate--or without any real language at all. In addition, I learned of the relentless efforts to make deaf children "normal", whatever the cost.

In other words, I learned of a culture which has survived through the mainstream world's complete denial of its existence.




Not a Disability

From a deafness-as-defect mindset, many well-meaning hearing doctors, audiologists, and teachers work passionately to make deaf children speak; to make these children "un-deaf." They try hearing aids, lip-reading, speech coaches, and surgical implants. In the meantime, many deaf children grow out of the crucial language acquisition phase. They become disabled by people who are anxious to make them "normal." Their lack of language, not of hearing, becomes their most severe handicap.

While I support any method that works to give a child a richer life, I think a system which focuses on abilities rather than deficiencies is far more valuable. Deaf people have taught me that a lack of hearing need not be disabling. In fact, it need not be considered a "lack" at all. As a hearing ally, therefore, I feel I have an obligation to follow the suggestions of deaf adults and work for both the use of American Sign Language and a positive portrayal of Deaf culture in the classroom. Deaf children are entitled to know that they are heirs to an amazing culture, not a pitiful defect.

In order to follow through on that obligation, one of the best things I feel I can do is try to educate other hearing people about the realities of American Sign Language and Deaf culture. Language is one of the most critical aspects of most cultures, and one which sets deafness aside from other "defects", such as blindness, physical disability, or illness. And no, sign language is not "universal." Nor does it always correspond to the spoken language in the same country. For example, American Sign Language (ASL) is native to the United States and Canada. Deaf Canadians might use English, French, or both as a written language. But deaf people in Great Britain, while they may write in English, use a completely different sign language.




American Sign Language

ASL is essentially the offspring of indigenous "new world" sign languages and French Sign Language (La Langue Signe Francaise, or LSF). LSF merged with the indigenous sign languages when it was brought to the United States in 1817 by Laurent Clerc, a Deaf Frenchman who opened the first American school for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut. One of these native sign languages which fed into the development of ASL arose in Martha's Vineyard in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. The Vineyard had a large genetically deaf population but no Deaf culture as such--hearing and deaf people both used the sign language as a primary means of communication among themselves.

Grammatically, ASL is far removed from English or even British Sign Language (BSL). One common misconception is that ASL is simply "silent English"--a means of representing English with the hands. Codes such as this, (e.g., Signed English) do exist, but they are rough and unwieldy hybrids of English grammar and ASL hand positions (known as "handshapes"), rather than languages in their own right. ASL has a grammatical structure suited to a visual medium; there is no direct correlation between English words and ASL signs.

The one spoken language which has the closest grammatical similarity to ASL is Navaho, because both languages use a similar pronounciation system. Rather than the standard "he","she", "it", and "they" of English, Navaho and ASL use a much wider array of pronouns that match the person or object they refer back to. These are known as "classifiers." For example, ASL has no discrete sign for "it" but instead uses any of a series of classifier signs which vary with the category, size, and shape of the object referred to. In this way, ASL pronouns carry much more information than do English pronouns.

ASL also avoids one of the biggest scourges of English: the "pronoun problem"-- the tendency of English speakers to use "he" as a generic singular pronoun representing any unkown person, male or female. However, once a person is mentioned in an ASL conversation, she is given a location in space which represents her for the remainder of the conversation (As you can see, my attempt to describe this difference butts right up against the pronoun problem!). Different ways of pointing to this location can indicate the number of people who occupy it, and their role in the conversation (subject or object, for example) but not their sex.


Deaf Culture

Because about 90% of Deaf people are born to hearing parents, they absorb their culture from their peers, not their families. Most Deaf children who attend residential schools for the deaf pick up ASL from their classmates (usually from the few classmates who are born to Deaf parents). Because of this source of cultural identity, one of the first questions Deaf people ask upon meeting each other is where they went to school and who their teachers were. In this way, the Deaf community can become very close-knit, as each member becomes familiar with residential schools in various regions of the country.

Deaf culture also places a great deal of emphasis on physical contact. Hugging is far more common than shaking hands, especially when parting. Deaf good-byes are unusually drawn out and even in passing not taking time to chat for a few minutes is considered rude. The Deaf community easily becomes a second family to many people whose own families are hearing.

Deaf churches also play a similar extended family role in the community, even for non-religious or non-Christian people. Often, Sunday is the only time that a person might have to escape from the working world (perhaps in an office with hearing people, where the language barrier is severe) and have actual conversations and socialize.

Like many minority groups, the Deaf community has its own stereotypes of the dominant culture. Often in Deaf theater and "oral" tradition, hearing people are portrayed as rigid and unemotional. Much of this perception comes from our use of English. Information in English is conveyed almost completely orally; by contrast, ASL builds grammar into facial expressions and body movement. Hearing people certainly do use some visual cues when communicating, but these are known as "body language", as extra-linguistic nuances rather than as grammatical features. As a result, when compared to Deaf people, hearing people can come off as expressionless and unfeeling. Hearing people may find themselves the butt of Deaf wordplay; if they are a bit slow on the uptake, they may be described as "hearing-and-dumb."

Deaf culture is also harsh on "traitors"--those who are deaf, but not Deaf. The sign used to denote such a person is the sign for "hearing", only made in front of the forehead. This epithet is emphatically not a compliment. It indicates that the individual represented is "hearing-in-the-head"; that she thinks of herself as a hearing person. This Uncle Tom analog is exactly the same kind of person that mainstream culture tends to applaud for "getting beyond her disability." But in the Deaf community, someone who rejects her Deaf identity is leaving behind a rich culture, not a disability. For these reasons, many members of the Deaf community look with disfavor on deaf people who try to assimilate.

Another group of people who earn comment, both favorable and unfavorable, in the Deaf community, are alphabet card vendors. You've seen these people at airports and malls, handing out plastic cards printed with the manual alphabet, along with a note that says they are deaf, asking for a donation. In one sense, these vendors are seen as beggars--as people who discredit the Deaf community by making their deafness pitiful. But alphabet card vendors are also seen by some as crafty equalizers who play on the guilt of hearing people to bring their money into the Deaf community. For my part, I tend to view alphabet card vendors the first way and never give them money. Additionally, it is worth noting that some of these vendors are simply scheming hearing people--if you watch them carefully, you can see them responding to auditory cues. In the Deaf community, for a hearing person to intentionally try to "pass" is not only dishonest, it is phenomenally rude.




Deaf Rights
The Deaf civil rights movement is the political arm of the Deaf community. Throughout history American deaf people have been denied the right to vote, to marry, and to raise children. The Deaf civil rights movement is dedicated to fighting this kind of discrimination and raising awareness of Deaf history and Deaf culture within the Deaf community.

Although the denial of rights to deaf people smacks of discrimination, Deaf parents even today have their children taken away under the logic that a lack of hearing makes them "unfit" parents. Nothing backs up this "logic." Deaf parents of hearing children often raise kids who become sign language interpreters; whose bilingual background is a social and professional asset. And Deaf parents of deaf children tend to raise the leaders of the Deaf community, as "Deaf of Deaf" are often the first to learn language, the most adept at ASL and English, and the ones who teach ASL to their peers at residential schools.
These residential schools are often a social joy for the deaf children who experience their first introduction to ASL (and sometimes language itself) from their peers and form social networks that may last a lifetime. This is one of the major reasons that parents send their children to residential schools rather than "mainstreaming" them in hearing classrooms (where they are often directed to "special education" instead).

Unfortunately, residential schools for the deaf are often sorely deficient in actual education. The teachers rarely use ASL or teach Deaf history and in most places are not required to. The administrations are often made up of hearing people who are still bent on assimilating the students. The focus is on "word attack" and speech skills, rather than science, math, history, and literacy in English. As a result, many deaf students in this country graduate from both residential and mainstreamed programs with a third-grade reading level and little chance of going to college or ever holding more than a minimum-wage job. Therefore, another major goal of the Deaf civil rights movement is parity in education--development of an educational system where deaf children can become both Deaf and literate.

Hearing people can have a place in the Deaf community. Each minority group tends to welcome genuine allies and the Deaf community is no exception. But it is important for us "hearies" to remember our role as allies. We join the community to show our support, not to lead. We can help educate other hearing people, but we are not missionaries to bring Deaf people into the mainstream. Deaf people are the appropriate leaders of their own civil rights movement and teachers of their children. Our role is not to give Deaf people a voice; it is to make sure that the voice already present is heard. And we can do that. We can teach other hearing people to listen.


Please select three things from these articles that you would like to discuss with each other. Post insightful, thought provoking and meaningful discussions. Explain why you picked what you did and create a discussion that will enhance what the article is about.

18 comments:

  1. This blog provided a lot of insight and a lot of information. One thing that caught my attention was this paragraph:

    "From a deafness-as-defect mindset, many well-meaning hearing doctors, audiologists, and teachers work passionately to make deaf children speak; to make these children "un-deaf." They try hearing aids, lip-reading, speech coaches, and surgical implants. In the meantime, many deaf children grow out of the crucial language acquisition phase. They become disabled by people who are anxious to make them "normal." Their lack of language, not of hearing, becomes their most severe handicap."
    My questions is why can't people accept deaf children for who they are instead of trying to change them into being "normal". What is normal? and who decides what is normal? Aren't people always saying just be yourself and don't let others change who you are?

    Also, the article talked about how hearing people tend to pity deaf people or if they succeed, we admire them for overcoming a severe handicap. Why is it that people tend to think like that? Is it because they are uneducated about Deaf Culture or is it something else? I've noticed several people who have felt pity for the Deaf community or a Deaf individual. I would like to believe that it is because people are uneducated and not because they think they are better than Deaf people.

    The last point that caught my attention was that 9 out of 10 deaf children are born from hearing parents. Most hearing parents have little to no knowledge of Deaf culture. They just want their child to be "normal" Yet again that term reappears. Would more education in schools about Deaf culture change this thinking? Or would hearing parents still want their deaf children to hear? I think that having more awareness about Deaf Culture in various academic settings would help hearing parents realize that Deaf children don't have to become hearing to be "normal"

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  2. This article provided a lot of insight into the Deaf culture and corrected many of the ideas I had grown up with or had been taught. The idea that because we in the hearing world try to “fix” children who are deaf and attempt to raise them to be “normal” we are actually isolating them even more was new to me. I have always thought that it would be best to help the child be a part of both worlds and let them make decisions about things like cochlear implants on their own. But I never thought about how raising a child without sign language could in fact be their true barrier.
    The second point I found interesting was that the spoken language and signing language in a country does not always correspond. I did know that there were different forms of sign language because my cousin’s sister is Deaf and from Papua New Guinea. Many times she and my father have attempted to converse freely with each other but the conversations are broken and confusion because he knows ASL and Mina knows Enga Sign Language. What surprised me about this point was that their written language can be completely different that the one they sign. I had never thought that one could know ASL but then write in French. I wonder if this is done because the hearing world wants an easy way to be able to converse with one who is deaf, so the deaf learn to write in their countries native language.
    A third point I felt the need to bring up is the fact that the only way 90% of deaf children learn about themselves and can freely converse with others is through their peers at a residential school. Why is it that we are so afraid of having children that are different that we cannot teach them to embrace themselves and learn how to make their own way in life? They must learn these things from their peers because too many of the adults in their life wish to “fix” them and make their lives “easier.” Also, why is it that even at a school created for specifically those who are deaf is the focus on speech skill and not actual education? If the child has discovered a way of communicating with others and is ready to learn, why must we insist on continually trying to change them? Let them learn what every other child is learning so that they won’t be behind when they enter the “real world.” The only handicap children who experience a speech skilled focused education with have is that they were not given the knowledge that they need to be a contributing member of society.

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  3. This article shows the Deaf culture in a whole new light. First Point: Well one thing that our culture is missing is the closeness of their community and how important relationships are to them. In our culture it is different and looking at it, is kind of sad. Why can we not be that close to people and cherish the relationship with people? Instead I feel we put up a block with people and not allow the closeness to happen or choose that you don’t like someone for some reason. Is it that hard to just get along with people? They cherish going to church not only to practice their religion but to have connection with people that speak their language. They also appreciate going to school to learn their language and find people they can connect with. Hearing people are not that appreciative of the little things, we take for granted more than we even notice.
    Second Point: Hearing and Deaf people have this language barrier that creates a challenge to do things that we do on a regular basis, communicate. Even different locations have different kind on signs, but they have a bond before they start talking it seems. They are really flexible with each other to form that relationship. I never realize how much of a challenge this would create. Kind of acts like you are going against a current, but have to stick with each other to get through. Deaf cultures have jokes about how to make the world better just like we do. We have similarities but the differences are interesting. Why are hearing people feeling bad for them when there are things we can learn to create a better society?
    Third Point: There is a quote that caught my eye that is interesting. “Blindness cuts people off from things; deafness cuts people off from people.” Do you agree? Or instead isn’t it a choice of the hearing to be welcoming to different? Is it more so hearing cutting Deaf out because they don’t want to try or make effort to understand?

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  4. This article is interesting and explains more for people to understand deaf culture. It would be hard for us to think about what to do if we didn’t know any hearing people around us when we were growing up and what the differences would be in life. For a deaf child to not have the opportunity to communicate sign language with parents would be hard because they won’t be as fluent with it and this is there culture so they are missing out on a whole neither world. It would be very hard to make friends because when children get together they talk about family and friends and interact, but how can a deaf and hearing child interact without sign language. The deaf child won’t be able to hear what they are saying and it will be hard for them to make a bond with someone their own age. I know Monica was saying in class today how when deaf people get together they are together forever and at a party there has to be an end time or they will never leave. I can understand this because they are finally with there own culture and can just let it rip and say everything and not have to be so exhausted trying to read lips and communicate back to them and make sure that both people understand what is being said in the conversation. So this would be a family to them because they are all alike. Deaf people yes are straightforward but why beat around the bush. They don’t have filler words like hearing people do so they just come straight out and say how they feel or ask you any question they are not afraid. They have no limits and like to interact and have steady eye contact.

    I think these topics were critical because many hearing people don’t see the difference or judge people right away and think they are rude. Having an open mind is the best way to get to know other people and how there culture is different then there’s.

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  5. Tiffany I agree, there are way too many people out there that don't have open mind and judge then react. They might even put people down because they are different. There should be an eye opener for people to understand.

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  7. As a self absorbed society we try to “fix” anyone who is not like us. Why do we think that everything and everyone who is different automatically worse off? We need to take the time to appreciate the differences that people have. Hearing parents who attempt to make their child “un-deaf” are depriving that child of their culture. Why should they have to change who they are in order to become what society wants them to be, not only hearing but a majority. Also, they do not need to be “fixed” because they are not broken. They simply use a different language to communicate and uphold the values and beliefs of a different culture. “We as hearing people tend to pity deaf people, or, if they "succeed" in the hearing world, admire them for overcoming a severe handicap”. Praising people who are deaf when they accomplish things that one would not consider a success if the person was not deaf is ridiculous. I would like to think that people just aren't educated about Deaf culture however I do not think this is the case. I think most people view differences as ways in which people are less than themselves.
    I believe that all hearing parents should allow their children to learn the language and values of their culture. Which would mean letting them go to residential schools. At the residential schools they can be who they are, “just another kid”. As opposed to in a mainstream school where they will more than likely never get passed the label of the deaf kid. If we really want to make life “easier” on children who are deaf we need to allow them to use their natural language. However, I do believe that everyone needs to be more educated about Deaf culture. I just don't think it is appropriate for deaf children to learn their own culture from someone who is not a part of their culture. How can someone teach something that they do not know first hand? In the article it discussed the fact that some residential schools are lacking in the education aspect. I wonder if a deaf child would still get more out of the residential schools though since if they went to a mainstream school they would more than likely get placed in a special education class where they not only aren’t getting a cultural education but they aren’t really getting an academic education either.
    After reading the blog I began to think about how often hearing people take the ability to have a knowledge of their culture as well as an ability to communicate with countless people for granted. I could not imagine not having the luxury of effortlessly communicating in my first language with just about every one I come to contact with. It is also unimaginable to me to not be allowed the right to learn about my culture. Knowing one's culture should be a right, however in the Deaf community it has become a privilege. It amazes me that a society can acknowledge certain cultures but not other ones. Deaf culture is one not appreciated but it is not even recognized in many peoples eyes as a culture.

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  8. My first point comes in the first article and it talks about the forwardness of the Deaf community. It says in the article that the deaf “read body language before words” and they generally know what tone of voice the speaker has based on that. As a hearing person, we do focus more on the actual spoken word of someone while the deaf are focused on reading body language and their face to try and pick up on what they are saying. Meanings are in people and not the words. Personally, I have not had many interactions with a deaf person. Maybe I am off track here, but I still think that is a good sense to have. Don’t you think that all conversations have a discrepancy in them whether its differences between cultures, problems, ages, et. al?

    “Hearing people tend to pity deaf people or if they succeed, we admire them for overcoming a severe handicap.” This is a quote from one of the articles and as I was reading it I was thinking to myself how this actually does happen. Even I have done it, but now that I have been superficially exposed to this culture, it’s not a handicap to them nor should it be for the hearing. Don’t get me wrong, we can be happy and say congrats, but shouldn’t be because we feel sorry for them. It should be because as a person they overcame a roadblock.

    For the last point that caught my attention was the one about “hearing-in-the-head.” Even though it is a minority culture, they still can single out individuals because of the trickery they present. Just like a person who is deaf and says that they are a hearing person. The Deaf culture thinks that as a bad influence since they are not ashamed of whom they have become. It’s like leaving behind your past, or where you came from. I know that I have some things I could forget in my life, but nothing that has formed who I am today or where my origins are from. So I can see why their culture would see them as a traitor (trying to be someone or something you’re not).

    Sam Rouse-
    I agree with your statements on how parents should let deaf children go to the residential schools instead of being thrown into a public school where they will become a target. It’s not that I want them to be sheltered, but for them to develop as a person with similar friends and people just like them to have a feeling of security before they do experience any kind of negativity. Also, like you said, they need to develop in the natural language in order to communicate!

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  9. Sam and Storm,

    In class I discussed the pain I feel with my daughter being in the mainstreamed school system. I talked about how I know one day she will need to go to the stateschool so she is allowed all the opportunities of her peers. It is an ongoing internal battle that I face everyday. I would be more than happy to share this discussion with you. Thank you for joining our blog.

    M

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  10. Caitlin-

    I agree with you that we don’t come across people we have an instant connection with. We have our first impressions and try to find commonalities but we do not have such a strong bond with others. In fact, the idea of an “instant connection” is what romantic comedies and today’s fairytales are based on.

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  11. Caitlin-

    I agree with you that most hearing people don't have that instant connection like Deaf people do. Hearing people may have one or two or a couple of close friends that they can have that instant connection with. But Deaf people seem to have that instant connection all the time. I have been to a couple of Deaf events and from what i seen i do feel like they have a closer connection. I think a lot of that has to do with the Deaf Culture.

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  12. Right away, this article caught my attention when it talked about Deaf standard time in the first paragraph. I know from first hand experience with my ASL teacher in high school that this is a real thing. We ended up taking a field trip to a deaf convention at the target center to experience deaf culture outside of the class room. We had a list of things we were supposed to get done and see but even from the moment we first got inside of the doors, we found ourselves losing time for all that we had planned due to my teacher introducing us to all of her friends and them catching up. Long story short, we ended up missing our bus back to school and had to wait for another one to come pick us all up. Has DST ever created a delay in your day?

    Secondly, when it said that the deaf don't "pussy-foot" around it brought up another memory from that day at the convention. I met Deaf UFC fighter Matt Hamill and went up to get an autograph from him but when I got to the front of the line, he signed overwhelmingly fast to me and I looked over at my friend Halie to have her tell me what he said. As soon as I looked away, he grabbed my shoulders and used his voice then told me to watch him and not look at Halie for help. He then signed much slower and took the time to help me understand. Although it was rude of me to not try to sign back right away, i was not expecting him to immediately correct my mistake as bluntly as he did but after understanding more about deaf culture I know it was not out of rudeness but that he wanted to teach me the correct way to handle the situation.

    Lastly, I think that allowing us hearing people to be a part of the deaf community but not lead it is how it should be. For a hearing person to come into the deaf community and tell them how to live their life wouldn't be fair. In the past, how deaf people weren't allowed to vote or marry proves that deaf civil rights is a serious concern in the deaf community (maybe not as much now as it was then) because it can be compared to racism as how there are always going to be some people that have prejudice among the deaf population trying to keep them down. For a hearing person to lead a deaf organization would be like professional tennis player coaching a swim team.

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  13. “People who are deaf are very sensitive to any put down, and rightfully so.” This sentence came after talking about how Deaf people are people first and deaf second. I think anyone can relate to this. I do not know any person who enjoys getting put down, not just Deaf people, but every person.

    I also liked the part in the first article that talks about how Deaf people have religious, school and other differences but they put that all behind them because of their one similarity. I think this is a good lesson for all of us to learn from. There has to be at least one thing that every person has in common with another person. Because of this we should be able to all get along better.

    I thought the part about how schools for the Deaf are deficient in educating students. I find it sad that the article generalized all schools in the country. I think by saying that the reading level is third grade for the students at graduating makes it seem that Deaf students are not as “smart” and can not accomplish the academic success as hearing students. I also think the statement would turn parents away from sending their kids to Deaf schools. If a legislative representative were to read this they would be all for shutting down the Deaf schools because the article makes it seem as though Deaf kids are not getting a better education in a Deaf school than they would in mainstream.

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  14. Connie
    I agree with your point about how hard it would be to be told you could not have kids or get married. That statement in the article shocked me. I had a hard time understanding why Deaf adults did not have the right to vote, be parents or even get married at times in our history. They can communicate and understand much the same things as hearing Americans do.

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  15. “Their lack of language, not of hearing, becomes their most severe handicap.”

    I feel really strongly about this sentence written by Carla A. Halpern. I definitely have to agree with this. The hearing community does discriminate other minorities but not to the same degree as the Deaf community. I wondered why for the longest time and I feel that this is one of the biggest reasons, simply because their language is not a voiced language. But it is their language that allows them to be a culture, not just their lack of hearing ability. I thought that this was a great point to be made.

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  16. Sam R

    I agree with you when you said our society tries to correct any difference in a person than what we consider the norms of society. I believe that we think this way due to the media showing us that in order to be successful you have to look or perform a certain way else your out of the loop

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  17. I thought this quote was interesting, “Blindness cuts people off from things; deafness cuts people off from people.” I like this quote because it explains says how hearing people usually won’t talk to deaf people because they are scared of them. They will try to avoid talking to deaf people at all cost. I get nervous when I talk to deaf people also because I am nervous about screwing up there language when communicating, but I wouldn’t turn my shoulder and look the other way because I saw a deaf person.

    The second statement I liked was, “Deaf people are “people” first and “deaf” second.” I really like this quote because too many people label deaf people before actually seeing them as an individual. When we meet other people we don’t recognize them for a hearing person just another individual, but when you meet a deaf person you recognize them as a deaf person.
    The last point that caught my attention was that 9 out of 10 deaf children are born from hearing parents. Most parents don’t know much about the Deaf Culture. They just want their child to be normal. They want their kid to be able to hear like them but that’s not going to happen. We need to be able to want the parents to accept their child is deaf and try to educate the child and the parents as much as possible. I think having more information about Deaf Culture in different settings would help somewhat.

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  18. Connie
    I agree with your point about not being able to have kids, get married, or even vote. It was hard to understand why deaf adults cant vote, or do anything the hearing people could. They can communicate and understand just like hearing Americans.

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