Through Deaf Eyes Essay

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    long into the future is the unit on deafness. On a basic level I understood what it meant to be deaf, however, I did not realize the Deaf culture surrounding this group of people. Before this course, my only exposure to deafness was through three acquaintances. None of them grew up in a Deaf family, used sign language, or had other friends who were deaf. Because of this, my view of people who are deaf was that they had a disability but it did not stop them from interacting with hearing people.

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    received the cochlear implant. It was so I could communicate in the hearing world and be able to talk and hear. After I got my surgery, I began school and was isolated between hearing and deaf kids. My hearing loss was leaning towards the deaf culture but I wanted to stay with the hearing culture and I did. In the deaf culture,

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    language is not just a way of communication for deaf people, it is a culture. Ninety percent of deaf children are born to deaf parents. The challenges facing parents with deaf children are numerous when it comes to identifying educational strategies that will maximize language acquisition, a sense of belonging, concept development, social competency, and ultimate societal contribution of their children. There are variations in how a person becomes deaf or hard of hearing, level of hearing, age of onset

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    Deaf Ethnic Groups

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    In the article should the Deaf Be Considered an Ethnic Group? By Susan Seligson the author examines the attitudes towards the deaf community and their classification in society. The author claims that the deaf community has major hurdles to over come to become a ethnic group including the medical industries affection toward technology like cochlear implants which are usually implanted into infants who may have hearing difficulties with doctors medical advice. Seligson maintains the belief in which

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    The Deaf Community in America: History in the Making The Deaf Community in America: History in the Making by Melvia M. Nomeland and Ronald E. Nomeland is a book written to describe the changes the Deaf community, with a capital “D”, has encountered throughout time. The authors mention, “By using the capital ‘D’ to refer to a community of people who share a language and culture and the lower case ‘d’ to refer to the audiological condition of hearing loss” (Nomeland 3). In this book we are taken

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    in being an unjust or excessive exercise of power;” and “a sense of being weighed down in body or mind.” Authority practiced unjustly will be the specific focus of this paper as it discusses oppression towards the Deaf community in the nineteenth century. Oppression towards the Deaf community at this time comes in different contexts: eugenics, audism, and oralism. This is a good introduction. It needs just a little work. You do a nice job of introducing the idea of oppression by using the dictionary

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    Culture” can be used to explain a black or gay culture. So, Deaf culture provides bonds that hold the deaf community together. Several different ways to categorize & define culture- Historically created solutions: “culture is the conscious and unconscious content that a group learns, shares, and transmits from generation to generation that organizes life and helps interpret existence” … “culture is the distinctive life…way of people who are united by a common language” … “the sum of attitudes, customs

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    Audism Unveiled Audism by it's very definition is a negative or oppressive attitude towards deaf people by either deaf or hearing people and organizations, and a failure to accommodate them. This documentary really opened my eyes as to what deaf people have gone through since the beginning of time. They have been treated with prejudice and oppression. They have been looked down upon- as if they are some sort of “subhuman” not worthy of being classified as a normal person because of the fact

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    In reviewing several videos from the Deaf Counseling Center, I have the utmost respect for counselors who are in training to learn ASL and have a desire to work with individuals with hearing loss. Honestly, I was struggling in watching the interpreter sign what she wants to express about psychotherapy, and the counseling process for individuals with a hearing loss. I found out as an upcoming vocational rehabilitation counselor having difficulty finding signs for simple words or interpretation in

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    In the video “Through your child eyes”, talks about how younger children learns through their senses and language. They mostly learn through the eyes, which is why sign language is important because they learn better through hand movements. Also in the video, parents talk about how they opened a “door” between their child and them, with the “key” being ASL. In addition to kids learning ASL, it also helps their knowledge and brain grow. Besides talking about how ASL impacts young children, it also

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