Fookem and Bug

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Archive for January, 2008

Why did Hearing People Take Over?

Posted by fookembug on January 29, 2008

By Jimactor

Transcript:

Hello, I want to share the story as I feel a little disappointed about hearing people. Why? For example, I am an actor. I read the script and the story has a deaf character. I am thrilled and auditioning for that part. The audition downsize and they already pick hearing actor who will play a lead role as deaf. Why? They say that the hearing person sign very well. To me, it looks like they try to save money on interpreter. They say it is good enough for him to hear and use sign language same time. I puzzle myself as I am 100 percent deaf actor. That’s why the hearing people always take over.

Another one, in ASL class, I used to be an ASL teacher. I am very eager to teach ASL. Same time, I am very curious to see who teach other ASL classes. I find out that the hearing people teach ASL classes. Whoa, wait a minute, why did they take over and teach ASL? What’s wrong with deaf people because ASL is our culture. You know but they say, as long as they can sign and see nothing wrong with it. Plus, most hearing people run ASL classes. The hearing people take over! Why can’t they leave deaf people alone and allow deaf people to take care of it? I feel disappointed!

Thirdly, the worst part is, do you remember that I tell you a story about deaf travel agents? I am very proud and support deaf as you know that there is a thousand hearing travel agents out there. I put deaf travel agents names on the left side of my blog with their permission that I can use their names. A few days later, I get lot of emails from people, they say that I have two faces. At first, I did not understand what they really mean that I am two faced. They say that I support deaf but for hearing, it is enough. They say I put/add the hearing name with deaf travel agents. No, no way, I puzzle and did not put/add the hearing name in it. So, I check to make sure if I did not put/add in my blog but it looks same to me. I puzzle again and talk to my son about what happened. My son puzzle in disbelief and say no. He finds out that person sends lot of emails to people who subscribe his. He gets our original information which is four deaf travel agents as he adds one hearing travel agent in it. What’s up? Why did hearing person take over? He does not like to see that the information is for deaf travel agents only, he wants to put hearing in deaf travel agents. STOP! I already get their permission but he addresses to put it without their permission. It is wrong thing to do. I still don’t understand why hearing people still take over? Why can’t they leave deaf people alone? There is many deaf people that did not get job. It is hearing’s fault because they push deaf people out and take over. What’s up? Why can’t they leave deaf people alone and allow deaf people to make their own life? Successful, you know what I mean? Why? I really am disappointed. (show image) Thanks for watching me. Thumb up.

Posted in Opinion, Vlog | 179 Comments »

George Veditz Speech on Presentation Day in 1884

Posted by fookembug on January 28, 2008

THE HOHENSTAUFEN ERA OF GERMAN LITERATURE

DELIVERED BY G.W. VEDITZ, AT THE PRESENTATION DAY EXERCISES OF THE NATIONAL DEAF-MUTE COLLEGE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 7TH, 1884.

In the period from the middle of the twelfth to the end of the thirteenth century, the German race reached a height of national glory which it has never at any time surpassed. The ninth, tenth and eleventh centuries cover a formative period, when, through its conflicts internal and external, the nation was developing its strength and preparing itself for the great part it was to play.

In the twelfth century, when we find the Hohenstaufen line swaying the sceptre of Charlemagne, the nation had emerged into a period of comparative quiet. It had undergone a complete regeneration. Old doctrines and old habits had been swept away by the influx of new ideas and new fashions, and an active vitality was infused, giving strength for the effort that was to be put forth.

The language had undergone the same vicissitudes as the people. It had before been broken up into the dialects of the various dukedoms and provinces; but, with the people it too had become settled and unified, the powerful example of the imperial house giving the ascendancy to the Suabian tongue.

Literature then left the seclusion of the monasteries, and turned to the more genial atmosphere of the royal court and of the castles of the nobility. Hitherto, the Church had wielded the greatest influence, but now the knight–the beau ideal of chivalrous manhood–became the central figure in the popular mind; and the monotonous chant of the monkish rhymer gave place to the livelier and more stirring song of the knightly minne-singer.

At the same time the Crusades and the Wars of the Guelphs and Ghibellines gave a stimulus to the martial and chivalrous spirit of the people, and furnished the theme for many a beautiful song. Moreover, the magnificent court of Frederick Barbarossa entertained with princely hospitality the brilliant and brave from far and near. The beauty of the women of this court, the splendor of its festivals and tournaments, attracted crowds of noble guests from Brittany and Flanders, Normandy and Provence; and the aspiring German mind being thus brought into contact with the ardent and chivalrous spirit of the south, caught the fire, and adopted with enthusiastic eagerness the fashions of the visitors. The Norman trouveres taught their lays and virelays to the German minstrel; and the Provencal singers of “Tristan and Isolde” and of Enid and Geraint found themselves eclipsed by their own pupils. In short, German literature blossomed forth into a vigorous and beautiful spring–the intense life and feeling of the time finding its expression in a burst of lyric and epic song, which even the golden age of the last century has not surpassed.

The sons and grandsons of the great Frederick were all cast in his heroic mould; and under them the nation advanced in the career so gloriously begun. Thus it is that the German of today not only looks upon the period of the Hohenstaufen of Suabian dynasty as one of greatest splendor in the annals of his country, but also gives its name to the first era of a distinctively German literature.

The bard who sounded the first note heralding the literary pageant of the era was Heinrich von Veldeck, who, in his version of the “Æneid,” does not scruple to make

Pan to Moses lend his Pagan horn,”

metamorphosing Virgil’s Greek and Trojan princes into adventurous German knights. But he is the first truly German poet of the age, and was followed by a long array of brilliant signers, lyric and epic–by Walther von der Vogelweide, Ulrich von Lichtenstein, Ofterdingen, Tannhauser, Hartman von der Aue, Gotfried von Strasburg and Wolfram von Eschenbach.

Of the lyric poets–the so-called minne-signers, or minstrels–Walther von der Vogelweide is the acknowledged chief. He was born about 1170, of poor but noble parentage. His youth was spent among the Tyrolean hills, whose primeval beauty early quickened the poetic soul within him–

“As yet a child and all unknown to fame,
He lisped in numbers for the numbers came.”

When a youth of twenty, he left his native hills, and, attaching himself to the imperial court, was from that time, till his death in 1227, one of the conspicuous figures on the national stage. He fought under the banners of the Empire in Palestine and Italy, and as an ardent Ghibelline took an active part in the politics of the day, making fierce and bitter attacks upon the corruptions in the church.

His poems breathe an intense love of nature and of truth, and are singularly pure and elevated in sentiment. His earlier songs fairly overflow with youthful luxuriance and gaiety, but as he grows older his verse assumes a more thoughtful and graver tone, and finally exhibits the serious and philosophic temper of old age.

Of the minne-signers, Walther is the best known to the modern German reader. He is inseparably connected with the “Minstrel War of Castle Wartburg,” and, as our Longfellow intimates in his beautiful ode on the old bard, his very name suggests the springtime meadow with its flowers and its song of the lark and nightingale. The productions of this grand old master are every day becoming better and better known to the German world, and they deserve to be–they are German to the core.

Besides Walther, we have a long and noble line of other minnesigners, whose poems have come down to us, and attest the marvelous literary activity of the age–ranging in excellence from the clumsy Bacchanalian song to the pure and impassioned lay addressed to the Virgin.

But we find the most interesting and distinctive feature of the period in the metrical romance, or the tale of knightly adventure in song. These works are numerous and varied, the subjects being drawn from already existing Provencal or Norman models. The stories had a tendency to group themselves about illustrious historical names, some having Alexander, some Charlemagne, and some the British Arthur as their central figure. They are vital with the spirit of chivalry, varying in dignity and interest from the true epic poem to the mere commonplace story of love and adventure.

The greatest of the epic writers is without question Wolfram von Eschenbach, a noble Franconian knight, the companion and friendly rival of Walther von der Vogelweide. He has left us two great epics, “Titurel, or the Guardians of the Grail,” and the “Parsifal,” besides the charming fragmentary love tale of “Sigune.” They form together the noblest relics of old German poetry, and are perhaps the first works of European literature which venture upon a profound analysis of human nature.

“Titurel” and “Parsifal” are both based on the old Armorican legends of the Holy Grail. “Parsifal” is the greatest work both of the poet and the age. It is the story of a man of noble and exalted mind, open-hearted and enthusiastic, at once credulous and skeptical, who falls into doubt and is driven by this doubt into a fierce despair, which makes him renounce both God and man. But after a bitter struggle, his doubt gives place to conviction, his obstinate pride to a noble humility; and henceforth we see him in an earnest pursuit of truth and eternal life, in the search for the Holy Grail. Wolfram makes him the hero not only of physical strife, but also of the nobler struggle of the soul with the world, of pride with humility, of faith with skepticism.

This poem is the most brilliant production of this brilliant period, and its great popularity in Germany at the present day—shown by the many editions it has passed through—gives witness to its extraordinary merit. Some German critics even place it on a level with Goethe’s Faust, in so far as a comparison can be drawn between an epic and a drama.

Next to Wolfram we have Gotfried von Strasburg and Hartman von der Aue. These three tower high above the throng of their contemporaries. Gotfried, in his “Tristan and Isolde,” and Hartman, in ["Iwein,"] his “Gawain,” and in ["Erec,"] his “Enid and Geraint,” rise far above all modern poets who have handled the same subjects, and are but faintly echoed by Scott and Coleridge and Tennyson, and by our own Lowell.

Though the works in question are in some sense imitations of foreign models, yet the greater among their authors had genius enough to raise them to the level and dignity of truly original works. There is also a group or cycle of epics of genuine native growth; and of these are the “Gudrun” and the “Niebelungen Lay.” They are based on the ancient legends of the Teutonic race, which it brought with it from the frozen north. They celebrate the most renowned old German heroes, and they are poems on which the Germans look with a just pride, calling the “Niebelungen” their “Iliad” and the “Gudrun” their “Odyssey.” They are familiar to English readers by means of translations and critiques; and, moreover, both they and Wolfram’s and Gotfried’s peerless songs have been made the subject of the grandest of Richard Wagner’s compositions—the “Niebelungen Ring,” and the “Parsifal,” and “Tristan and Isolde.”

This splendid era of German literature falls wholly within the Hohenstaufen period, and it seems as if its existence was bound up with the life of this princely house. The rout of Tagliacozza, in 1268, meant not only the death of Conradin, the last Hohenstaufen, but also the blight of the literary tree that had flourished in such beauty and splendor under this dynasty. The decline was rapid, for the very heart was dead. The lyricists lost all the grace and passion of Walther and Lichtenstein, and their songs became inane and degraded, pandering to the sensual taste of the time. The soulless meister-song succeeded to the lays of the old minstrels; while such epic poets as still existed, Rudolph von Ems and Konrad von Wurzburg, complain bitterly of the hostility and bad taste of the people, and seem at the same time to be aware of their own inferiority. This literary barrenness lasted for two hundred years, until Luther, at Wittenberg and Worms, roused anew the heart of the nation, and modern German literature begins.

One of the most marked features of the present time is our interest in the past. Our old literatures have ardent and loving students, who daily find new treasures of the richest poetry which have long lain concealed. Percy and Scott have resuscitated the exquisite old English ballads, while Scott in his “Triermain,” Coleridge in his “Christabel,” and Tennyson in his “Idyls,” have made the heroes of the Round Table as popular now as they were in the heyday of chivalry.

In Germany, the comparative poverty of its literature makes the so-long-unknown gems of the Hohenstaufen time, a gift of priceless value, and they now shine refulgent in the literary diadem of the nation. Through the genius of Richard Wagner, Bodmer, Von der Hagen, and a host of others, these old works are becoming daily better known and daily dearer to the patriotic German heart. And so should it be. Let the present and the past in literature always confront and interpret each other, and, in the words of the English Laureate,

“Their echoes roll from soul to soul,
And grow forever and forever.”

Posted in Deaf History | 3 Comments »

Richard Roehm hates Deaf jokes?

Posted by fookembug on January 28, 2008

Richard Roehm wrote: “The joke is very poor taste if you want use something to make the deaf community look coexistable with hearing neighbors.

We use two way pagers and personal communicators to find out which house is the deafie’s. Why send a backward message with the car horn? Lets use the sidekicks and 2way pagers.

The car horn is not exactly something your neighbors want your deaf friend’s to be using to find your home. ”

Here’s his video:

Please read:

http://fookembug.wordpress.com/2008/01/26/pepsi-cola-will-have-a-sign-language-ad-during-the-super-bowl-game/

Posted in Announcement, Opinion | 118 Comments »

Pepsi Cola will have a Sign Language Ad during the Super Bowl Game

Posted by fookembug on January 26, 2008

Check this out!

Only deaf people will get this Super Bowl ad
Pepsi Co’s pre-game advertisement features a joke that originates from
the deaf community and will play out on screen over 60 seconds of total

silence.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22824530/from/ET/

I’ve pasted in the story here:

updated 11:29 a.m. MT, Thurs., Jan. 24, 2008

NEW YORK – Amid the wall-to-wall sound during next Sunday’s Super Bowl,

one commercial from PepsiCo could send some viewers grabbing for their
remotes to check whether they’d accidentally hit the mute button.

The pre-game advertisement features a joke that originates from the
deaf
community and will play out on screen over 60 seconds of total silence,

a veritable eternity when it comes to the noisiness of Super Bowl ads.

“It’s a popular story and we just turned it into an advertisement,”
said
Clay Broussard, a supply and logistics manager at PepsiCo who proposed
the idea for the ad. “This is the PepsiCo flavor of that joke.”

The joke goes like this: Two guys are driving to their friend Bob’s
house to watch the Super Bowl. Once they get to Bob’s street, neither
knows which house is his. They sit in the car, arguing, until one of
them has an idea. He starts laying on the horn, and one by one, the
houses light up and dogs start barking.

One house stays dark and quiet: It’s Bob’s.

Deaf people will be falling out of their chairs in disbelief, National
Association of the Deaf president Bobbie Beth Scoggins wrote in an
e-mail response to questions. Hearing people, Scoggins wrote, will stop

what they’re doing to see why there are no sounds. She believes it’s an

historic first for an ad featuring American Sign Language to get such
prominent play.

“I was glad to see this part of deaf culture awareness shared in a most

clever way,” Scoggins, who is deaf, wrote by e-mail as she was
traveling.

Broussard, who plays Bob in the commercial, has worked for PepsiCo in Dallas for 27 years. He got involved in the deaf community through a
church he and his wife attended, where the services were conducted
entirely in sign language. Broussard is not deaf.

The two actors who play Bob’s friends – Brian Dowling and Darren
Therriault – are also PepsiCo employees, and are deaf. Dowling works
for Frito-Lay  in Arizona, and Therriault works for PepsiCo in Chicago.

Broussard worked on the ad concept on his own time. He said, “This was
all extra credit.”

It was 18 months before he showed it to senior managers, who decided
they wanted it for the Super Bowl.

The ad was directed by Baker Smith, with creative help from BBDO-NY. A PepsiCo spokeswoman declined to say how much the ad cost.

Posted in Announcement | 12 Comments »

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Wants to cut the Deaf Services Off the Budget.

Posted by fookembug on January 24, 2008

CALIFORNIA BUDGET CUT CRISIS

California’s Governor wants to cut $500,000 for deaf and hard of hearing services. If this happens, GLAD and other agencies will be forced to reduce or eliminate services for deaf and hard of hearing people. This means less assistance when you need interpreters or captioning, longer waits for advocacy, fewer accessible health programs, less assistance with Social Security problems, and less information for you, your family and your friends.

The Governor’s budget cuts hurt all of us. We need to work together to convince the Governor to STOP the proposed budgetcuts to deaf and hard of hearing services.

Center on Deafness – Inland Empire

Deaf Community Services of San Diego

Deaf Counseling, Advocacy, and Referral Agency

Deaf and Hard of Hearing Service Center, Inc.

Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness

NorCal Center on Deafness, Inc

Orange County Deaf Equal Access Foundation

Tri-County GLAD

Please click on WWW.GLADINC.ORG for a flyer asking the Governor and the California Legislature to STOP budget cuts for deaf and hard of hearing programs.

**Please stop by at CODIE to fill out the STOP BUDGET CUTS Flyer and send the flyers by mail or fax at your local district office and captiol office.

THANK YOU

Lisa Kay Price
Regional Director
3576 Arlington Ave #211
Riverside CA 92506

951-275-5000 voice
951-275-0640 tty
951-275-5065 fax
12.158.72.101 IP
www.codie.org

Posted in Announcement | 93 Comments »

Our First Year Blog Anniversary

Posted by fookembug on January 24, 2008

Happy 1st Anniversary! We are proud to hear all, see all, know all, and share all. Your support has made our future work possible and we will do our best to bring you many more news, stories, videos, etc. Hope you enjoy our blog/vlog. We would love to have your feedbacks, please feel free to share. We just wanted to give a big thank you to all readers and supporters. It is a great feeling to know that people enjoy visiting here and support what we are doing. We can’t thank everyone enough.

FB Editors

Posted in Announcement | 18 Comments »

Percentage of Deaf Staff at Deaf Schools

Posted by fookembug on January 23, 2008

“Reprinted with permission from author (Trudy Suggs). Originally appeared at www.i711.com on December 12, 2007.”

In 1997, an article published in DeafNation Newspaper examined staff numbers at 21 residential schools in the U.S. Only three schools reported having more than 40 percent of staff – including all levels of employees, such as maintenance, administrators, dorm staff and teachers – who were deaf or hard of hearing, Ten years later, at least five schools report having broken the 50 percent mark (see chart).The residential school has long played a pivotal role in the Deaf community, given its strong, deep roots in Deaf education history. With the 1817 establishment of American School for the Deaf, in Hartford, Conn., residential schools have since served as a social, educational and language source for many. In fact, it is often at such schools that deaf people are given language and meet deaf role models for the first time in their lives.

Effects of Deaf Staff
In the 1997 article, Brian Sipek, then a junior at the Illinois School for the Deaf, said, “The [hearing] staff are usually not familiar with what the student needs, being a deaf person. There are some hearing teachers, I admit, that try to be very helpful to deaf students, but it’s not the same coming from them, since they were never raised as a deaf person. They’re just not as familiar with being deaf as we are.”Are students and communities better served through a large number of deaf employees at deaf schools? “Without question, a diverse faculty and staff impact positively on students’ motivation to achieve academically and to set their sights high,” says Texas School for the Deaf (TSD) superintendent Claire Bugen, who is hearing. “Deaf role models are part of the fabric of our educational environment. “

The positive effects of having deaf staff at residential schools are unquestionable, but most schools continue to have more hearing employees than deaf. Sipek feels this should be changed. “I still believe that there is a shortage of deaf and hard of hearing role models for these young students at the residential schools. Being a minority, deaf and hard of hearing children need role models, someone who views the world in the same way that they do, to look up to and be inspired by. “

Indiana School for the Deaf (ISD) superintendent Dr. David Geeslin, who is deaf, believes having deaf people on staff is a reason for ISD’s enrollment rising dramatically to 377 students within a few years. “Obviously, with deaf staff, we have a greater number of deaf role models for students, and this also leads to increased exposure to bilingualism for the students,” he says. “Deaf people can share knowledge that no college education can provide.”Language is another benefit to having deaf staff, says Alex Slappey, Wisconsin School for the Deaf (WSD) superintendent. “

Language is learned through the interchange of the language, and the richer and more diverse the language models available, the richer and more diverse the language foundation will be. It’s essential that students at WSD, an American Sign Language/English bilingual program, have the language models that both peers and adults provide. It is equally important that we have hearing staff because we are a bilingual program and provide the cultural and language models our students require to develop English language skills and an understanding of the hearing culture.”

Dr. Geeslin adds, “Even so, it’s critical that we maintain a bicultural environment where hearing staff are also equally respected and revered, especially if they’re fluent in both American Sign Language (ASL) and English and have the right attitude.”

Obstacles
Among the several reasons cited in the 1997 articles for having such low percentages of deaf staff were widening career choices for deaf professionals, hiring systems, pay levels, and certification procedures. These appear to continue to be challenges today.

“There are so many more professional employment opportunities today for people who are deaf and many more pre-service training and educational opportunities than there used to be. All of this is great, but it means that many capable individuals are seeking and finding challenging employment outside of the education arena,” says Joseph Finnegan, director of Conference of Educational Administrators of Schools and Programs for the Deaf (CEASD). “Also, I think that many individuals don’t see educational administrative employment as very attractive these days, especially with long hours, low pay and many headaches.” CESAD, established in 1868, provides accreditation for deaf schools, and advocacy and program services.

“The state hiring process may inadvertently discriminate against qualified deaf and hard of hearing candidates. This is less true for direct contact staff in Wisconsin, such as teachers, assistants, and dorm staff. We were successful in changing requirements for that in the early 1990s. However, it continues to be true for non-contact staff such as building/grounds and food services staff,” Slappey theorizes. “Bureaucratic certification systems are also impediments to hearing, deaf, or hard of hearing candidates, and can be rather discouraging.”

“I think there are both positives and negatives that contribute to this dilemma of a lack of deaf staff. Clearly, deaf people have many more career choices today than in the past, and with changing technology I suspect that will only continue to be a factor – that’s a good thing,” Bugen adds. “Salaries in education, on the other hand, have not kept pace with the private sector and many young people both want and need to be paid better than most educators are paid. Now with the requirements of highly qualified teaching under various laws, our already shrinking pool of qualified deaf and hearing candidates is compromised even further, which will likely cause more challenges in the years ahead.”

Dr. Geeslin is less forgiving. “Even though circumstances for gaining certification have become much stringent, the harsh truth is that we have to roll up our sleeves, whether we’re deaf or hearing or whatever our languages are, and work as much as we can to meet requirements. There’s no way around it at this point. We have to actually try and do what we can to earn our credentials, because we can. After all, we are to serve as models for students. It is time to raise the bar for ourselves and our students.”

Deaf Administrators
Currently, there are at least 14 deaf or hard of hearing superintendents in the nation, a number that fluctuates with time. “I foresee a need for more deaf administrators at deaf schools, but I think the pool of qualified candidates is smaller than it could be,” Slappey says. “Finding good administrators, whether hearing or deaf, is a problem. States are now more aware of and sensitive to the value a good deaf administrator brings to a program.”

Finnegan, a former superintendent, notes that graduate-level or professional-level training for deaf people were nonexistent for years, especially after the closure of the Leadership Training Program at California State University, Northridge, but that this is changing with the establishment of the Gallaudet Leadership Institute (GLI).

Training may be key, Bugen agrees, who also cites GLI. “Given the growing scarcity of young deaf or hearing professionals interested in education, we have to groom and grow our future leaders from within. We have to find ways to give our talented young deaf people opportunities to take on leadership roles and then encourage them to get the proper certification and training to assume administrative positions.”

“I think another challenge is that so many deaf administrators try to buck the system head-on instead of working within the system,” Dr. Geeslin states. “What helps me in my current position greatly are my years in outreach. I was out in the field, and I saw how hearing parents often didn’t care about Deaf culture. They simply wanted to find the best options for their children in acquiring spoken and/or written English. I had to come up with different ways of sharing the idea of using ASL to acquire English, and that really helped me understand the reality of working within the system in order to buck it. It’s all about mediating between the two worlds.”

New Challenges
What makes the enrollment boom that some residential schools are experiencing even more remarkable is that a Dec. 4 article in Education Week reported that only 15 percent of 72,000 K-12 deaf students attend deaf schools, down from 33 percent in 1985.

“I think there are two important elements that contribute to this success. The first is a community with a critical mass of Deaf people and a school that offers a high quality educational program. We find an increasingly large number of Deaf families moving to the Austin area so that their children can attend TSD,” Bugen says. “When this happens it not only keeps our enrollment strong, but it brings more Deaf families into the larger business and social community of Austin. Second, I believe the school must be ‘Deaf friendly’ and involve Deaf people in all aspects of the school’s operations so that Deaf people feel respected, valued and empowered.”

Serving a specific niche is another significant boost, Slappey says. “The landscape of deaf education has been changing and continues to change. Deaf schools, especially residential schools, need to decide where their focus is going to be in terms of who they will serve and how they will serve their students. WSD considers itself a niche school that serves children who require a visual language, ASL, to access education. This doesn’t mean we don’t serve the more hard of hearing child who uses English, but we do not sacrifice the needs of the ASL child to meet the needs of the English child. Deaf schools need to show how their uniqueness may make them a better placement option. To a large degree, this is an education and public relations issue. We must educate as to the unique needs, especially the communication and social emotional needs, of our deaf children.”

Even so, schools are struggling with an emergent problem: students with additional disabilities, such as autism or attention deficit disorder. According to Education Weekly, a 2005 survey indicated that 42 percent of 37,000 deaf students reported having additional disabilities. Dr. Geeslin, noting that 52 percent of ISD’s students have other disabilities, says that the lack of deaf teachers specializing in special education is a dilemma. “Now with the proliferation of students with additional needs, it’s even more crucial that deaf teachers pursue certification and experience in working with those students. The students are the ones who need the best language and cultural role models. And who knows? With earlier intervention and clear language models, it may be that those students make greater progress in acquiring both languages improving academic performance.”

Citing changes in federal and state statutes, Slappey says, “It is not a trend limited to teachers of the deaf, but part of the overall trend. To realize a true change in the supply, the teaching profession needs to be made more attractive as a career choice. Such things as better compensation, better working conditions, less bureaucracy, and less paperwork would go a long way to that extent. It’s a huge order to attempt to implement.”

‘Grow Our Own’
Despite the hurdles, Dr. Geeslin believes he has the solution to ensuring stronger roots and equality at deaf schools.

“15 years ago, I went to the National Association for the Deaf conference and ran into a friend, Lindsay Dunn. Given that I’ve always tried to look at things from outside of the box even as a teacher, I had been thinking about the lack of diversity at ISD. So I asked Lindsay how we could bring more African-Americans to the school. He said, ‘I have the answer. First, what did you do to recruit them?’ I told him that we had asked many people, but none ever applied. He then asked if we had a strong black deaf community, and I said we did not. He asked if we had any black deaf teachers. I again said we did not. He said, ‘There you have it. You have to grow your own first.’”

Profoundly affected by this revelation, Dr. Geeslin’s outlook changed. “Thanks to Lindsay, I have tried to ensure that we grow our own by encouraging staff, students and parents to invest in the community, and making sure that they understand they are investments themselves, too. We have to do this to create a community to which people of all types want to return and continue the work previous generations did. This is one reason ISD has grown so much in such a short time – because we grow our own.”

The fact that more schools have broken the 50 percent mark comes as good news to Sipek, who graduated Gallaudet University in 2004 and now works at the university. “I’m thrilled to know that there are more role models for deaf and hard of hearing children at residential schools. This closes a much-needed gap, but like most things, there is always room for more. I think this increase in staff numbers has been a long time coming.”

My thoughts:

This article first came about in 1997 when Brian Sipek asked me to see how many schools had deaf people employed at deaf schools. I agreed, and set out to collect the data. I was surprised at the amount of resistance from schools in giving me the statistics I asked for – something that was also true this time around. But I was even more surprised at the staggeringly low numbers – and how defensive some schools were about the numbers even though I hadn’t said a word. My questions were simple: 1. How many students attend your school? 2. How many people do you employ? 3. How many of those staff members are deaf or hard of hearing?

Those who did not try to justify their low percentages were the ones who had outstanding attitudes, were upfront about this being a concern, and worked hard to change the numbers.

I am beyond thrilled to see how the numbers have grown since 1997, even if only a few have broken the 50 percent barrier. I should also point out that the numbers of deaf and hard of hearing teachers and dorm staff at many schools are quite high, and that the low numbers usually stemmed from cafeteria workers, maintenance, and administration. This is in no way an excuse; we should have deaf employees in each of these categories, too.

As Sipek commented, we still have a long way to go. Regardless of changing needs and times, we must continue to promote the increased hiring of qualified deaf people in key positions at every level. After all, paraphrasing Lindsay Dunn, it’s the only way we can grow our own.

© Copyrighted material, used by permission. This article can not be copied, reproduced, or redistributed without the express written consent of the author.

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Posted in Deaf History | 20 Comments »

Swiss Cash

Posted by fookembug on January 22, 2008

By Jimactor

Transcript:

Hello again, I want to talk about deaf people that love to buy pentagon, pyramid, CDT (Canadian Diamond Trader), airplane, etc….I grew up and saw lot of deaf people buy it then buy another. I see that they still buy it over and over. They never learn their mistakes. People come to me and ask me to see if I want to buy Swiss Cash. I say, wait a minute, I don’t want to buy anything from people as I am not interested. If I want to buy, the best way is to buy through bank or lawyer or something like that. They say, no no, it makes money. I nod my head. Yes, right, you only make money for a short time but after that, it won’t last long. I learn from my father that he says, never buy anything from people that will lead to enemy who is not getting the money. I believe that, I resist. Now, the pentagon, pyramid, I forget to add STS, CDT are out of business. Now what about Swiss Cash? I wonder anyone already becomes rich than me yet? I doubt, I already talk to my stock broker. I ask him about Swiss Cash, is it good one? He says, oh well, you have to work hard to become rich but honest, no, it won’t make you rich. I know, I feel relief. Now my mind pops up about what happen to Swiss Cash lately. I hear that it runs out of business. Their website is closed and block people to access or what? I am curious if anyone becomes rich and more money than me? Please leave some comments and let me know what happen to Swiss Cash. I am curious, I know that it does not make you rich, it makes you broke and make more enemies. I am sorry to say that but good luck with your Swiss Cash. Bye.

Posted in Vlog | 56 Comments »

Ridor is back!

Posted by fookembug on January 22, 2008

How do I know he is back? After a long conversation with Ridor through AIM, hey, I know him back in Gallaudet when we were student. I love his company because he has lot of news to share…. Anyway, I feel honored to make an announcement that his site will start the countdown to bring RidorLIVE.com back. The addy is http://countdown2resurrection.wordpress.com/

His comment for you, ‘Be prepared and be afraid’.

-Fookem

Posted in Announcement | 45 Comments »

WANTED

Posted by fookembug on January 21, 2008

WORM CIRCUS I’d like to put together a worm circus. So I’m looking for a few dozen well-trained worms to start my circus up. And if you have any strange looking cockroaches, they’d be good for my freak show. So I’ll buy them too. Must be able to follow directions well. They MUST know ASL. Call me at 800-BUZZ-BUGS.

Posted in Classified | 6 Comments »