Showing posts with label Sign Language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sign Language. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Philly Police Discriminates Against The Deaf

Deaf News: U.S. Justice Department concludes Philadelphia police discriminate against the Deaf or Hard of Hearing.

PHILADELPHIA, PA -- A U.S. Department of Justice review has found the Philadelphia Police Department discriminated against people who were Deaf or Hearing-Impaired. Philadelphia police handcuffed Deaf people behind their back, thus making them unable to communicate with sign language, DOJ wrote in a Dec. 7 letter to the department. Police did not inform courts that defendants appearing for a video arraignment were Deaf, so the individuals did not understand what was happening, according to the review. And police failed to provide qualified sign-language translators or other services to defendants, victims, and witnesses, according to the review.



DOJ said it was seeking to remedy the problems cooperatively through a consent decree with the department. "In the event that we are unable to reach such a resolution, the Attorney General may initiate a lawsuit pursuant to the [Americans with Disabilities Act]," the letter states. The Police Department issued a statement Friday evening saying it would work with DOJ to fix any problems.

"While the finding and conclusion regarding the complaint are sobering, we appreciate the DOJ's work and their input regarding the matter," the Police Department said. "We are using this as an opportunity to address a legitimate concern and make necessary improvements. The department's goal is to move beyond remedial measures with a commitment to making this department a model for others in adhering to the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act." The Police Department said it would collaborate with the city's Office of the Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer and with the Mayor's Commission on People with Disabilities. The Justice Department review was prompted by a complaint from a man who had been arrested, and that led to four other people who alleged discrimination by police.

According to the original complaint:

In 2013, a 23-year-old man who was Deaf was arrested in court after he threw a bracelet hitting two people during a sentencing hearing for his brother. He was handcuffed behind his back, making him unable to use sign language. While in police custody, a radio room staffer was identified as having some sign language ability, but the man could not understand what was being communicated. The man asked for a qualified interpreter, but police ended their attempt to communicate and placed him in detention for 16 hours. During his video arraignment the next morning, the judge was not told he was Deaf and the video was not captioned. Two months later, police arrested him mistakenly for failing to appear in court. His hearing had actually been scheduled for a later date. He was again handcuffed behind his back, but after his mother intervened, the officers cuffed him in the front. When he explained the hearing had been rescheduled, the officers asked for documentation but would not allow him to search for it. After he was detained and released, he asked for a telecommunication system for the deaf, but the one police provided him did not work.



SOURCE

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Deaf Short Film - THIS IS NORMAL

VIDEO [CC] - THIS IS NORMAL - A short film about being Deaf, being hearing, and being human.



THIS IS NORMAL is about a young Deaf woman named Gwen who undergoes an experimental medical procedure that is supposed to 'cure' her of her deafness and give her the ability to hear. Despite the controversy, Gwen risks her friends, culture, and identity to discover the answer to the question, 'Is it worth giving up who you've been for the 'maybe' you could BECOME?'





Written/Directed By: Justin Giddings & Ryan Welsh



Starring:

Ryann Turner (Weeds, Up All Night, Outpost)

Russell Harvard (There Will Be Blood, Fargo)

Molly Burnett (Daytime Emmy-nominee, Days Of Our Lives, True Blood)



Visit: www.thisisnormalafilm.com



Subscribe to OwnHealer Channel.



Related:

Interview With Hearing Parents Of A Deaf Son

Educating Hearing People About The Deaf World

Cochlear Implants Is NOT A Cure !

Deaf Culture - Have We Cured Deafness ?

Cochlear Implant Users Parody

The Language in Space of the Cochlea Implantation

Friday, November 25, 2016

Robert Panara - First Deaf To Be On US Stamp

VIDEO [CC] - Deaf News: Robert Panara, became the first National Institute for the Deaf faculty member to be featured on a United States postage stamp.



ROCHESTER, NY -- Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Robert Panara, who was the first Deaf faculty member at Rochester Institute of Technology's National Institute for the Deaf, knew no limits for what a Deaf person could accomplish.



As a tribute to his achievements, Panara will be honored on a new U.S. postage stamp showing him signing the word "respect."



Panara, who died in 2014 at age 94, joined the NTID faculty in 1967 and for two decades was an inspirational and innovative educator, as he had been previously at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.



Robert Panara, A Profile. Video Credit: DCMP.



"During his 40-year teaching career, Panara inspired generations of students with his powerful use of American Sign Language," said the Postal Service, in its announcement Tuesday that the new stamp featuring Panara will be part of the Distinguished Americans series.



The stamp was designed by Ethel Kessler, art director for the Postal Service, and based on an image taken by RIT/NTID photographer Mark Benjamin.



Panara's son, John, who is an English instructor at NTID, sent an email to the NTID community Tuesday saying that the "picture on the stamp is one that you certainly are familiar with, for it has been seen often around campus the last few years, in offices and on hallway walls."



Benjamin's photograph of his father signing the word "respect," John Panara added, is a "theme that will 'ring out loud and free' (to borrow a line from my dad's famous poem) every time the stamp is placed on an envelope!"



John Panara said that when he received an email a year ago telling him that the Postal Service's Stamp Advisory Committee had recommended the issuance of a stamp of his father, he read the email over and over again to make sure he wasn't dreaming.



Harry Lang, a professor emeritus at NTID and author of Teaching from the Heart and Soul: The Robert F. Panara Story, posted on Facebook: "What a nice Thanksgiving present! Bob is certainly looking down with his famous smile right now."



Lang, who was an adviser to the Postal Service on the stamp, noted in the foreword to his biography that the senior Panara was a poet, author, lecturer and theater aficionado.



Panara, Lang wrote, was largely self-educated at a time accommodations were not available for Deaf children.



"He was also among the first wave of Deaf scholars in the twentieth century, and a pioneer in the field of Deaf Studies," Lang noted.



Panara's poem "On His Deafness," written in 1946, has been reprinted many times and won first prize in the World of Poetry contest in 1988. Lang, in his biography of Panara, said the poem is about "how Deaf people can 'hear' with an 'inner ear' of imagination." ... Read The Full Story - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Debunking Myths About Deaf People - Rikki

VIDEO [CC] - Share: Debunking myths about Deaf people by Rikki Poynter.



A Deaf activist and Youtuber Rikki Poynter discussion and conversation questions about the Debunking myths about Deaf people these today - closed captioned.



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


Loud sound coming near the end. You've been warned. Also, thanks, Bobby, for helping me with the driving scene! http://sullyzenphoto.com



Subscribe to Rikki's channel: http://youtube.com/rikkipoynter



Follow @RikkiPoynter:

Twitter - http://twitter.com/rikkipoynter

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Related Rikki Poynter:

Shit Hearing People Say About Deaf People

Rikki Poynter In British Deaf News Magazine

Being Deaf and Socializing

Being Blind Versus Being Deaf

Police Brutality Against Deaf People

WWE Star John Cena Q&A From A Deaf Fan

VIDEO [CC] - The WWE Star John Cena's questions and answers from a Deaf fan in Cena sign language and gives hug.



The World Wrestling Entertainment Star John Cena share a clip from John Cena channel on YouTube. John Cena's answering questions from a Deaf fan, John Cena signs back what he will do. Fan ends up on stage for hugs.



John Cena is an American professional wrestler, rapper, actor, and reality television show host signed to WWE, where he is assigned to the SmackDown brand. Cena started his professional wrestling career in 1999.





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John Cena's sign language of rapper "You Can't See Me" is the debut studio album by WWE's wrestler John Cena and his cousin, Tha Trademarc, billed together as John Cena & Tha Trademarc. It was released on May 10, 2005, by WWE Music Group and Columbia Records... Read more on Wikipedia.



Follow @John Cena:

Facebook - https://facebook.com/johncena

GogglePlus - https://plus.google.com/u/0/+johncenaaa

Instagram - https://instagram.com/john_cenation02

Twitter - https://twitter.com/johncena

YouTube - https://youtube.com/channel/johncena

Official Site - http://wwe.com/superstars/john-cena

The Challenges of Being Deaf in a Hearing World

Deaf News: Even though I knew that I was Deaf and used sign language, parts of my identity were still fragmented.



TORONTO, ON -- Torontoist: This article is part one of a series on accessibility in Toronto for a Deaf, queer, nonbinary person. I grew up in small-town southern Ontario. I hated it--I wanted to experience something bigger, but I didn’t know what or how. My life was slightly different from others. I was a Deaf kid living in a Hearing world.



Growing up as a Deaf kid was really challenging. There were limited options, especially in a tiny community. Unlike hearing kids who went to their local schools, I had to get up earlier than other kids so I wouldn’t miss the short school bus.



Our Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing program was at a mainstream school with other hearing kids. The Deaf kids would have their own homeroom, taught by a “Teacher of the Deaf.”



Students in our program would occasionally be placed in “normal” classrooms with other hearing students, communicating through the use of an interpreter. Unfortunately, none of the teachers in the program were actually deaf, so no examples of healthy Deaf adult role models were present in my childhood.



The only other option was to attend a provincial school for the Deaf. The problem? I couldn’t stand being away from my mother, and attending the school meant that I’d have to live in residence. So I didn’t have much exposure to the Deaf community growing up, except for a few events here and there.



I remember attending Mayfest, an annual Deaf expo hosted by the Ontario Association of the Deaf (OAD) at St. Lawrence Market in Toronto. The number of Deaf and signing participants often overwhelmed me--they signed so differently, not like the way I did.



There were literally hundreds of them from various backgrounds, of different races, and of all types of disabilities. This event was something that I looked forward to every year--a favourite part of my childhood, being in a space where we could celebrate being ourselves.



It was not until I became a teenager that I understood that my school taught us Signed Exact English (SEE) and not American Sign Language (ASL). So that was why others signed differently.



The signing system I had learned was intended to accommodate hearing people and “improve” our English literacy skills. This, I felt, had taken away my Deaf community and Deaf culture. I was being assimilated, and, due to that, I had no sense of identity.



Even though I knew that I was Deaf and used sign language, parts of my identity were still fragmented. Nearly everyone around me was straight and I didn’t fit the mold. I knew that, despite being Deaf, I was further marginalized by my own Deaf community. What did you expect? Growing up in a small community meant limited options, limited resources, limited identities, and limited access.



This meant that the Deaf community that I grew up in was not accessible for me as a deaf person with emerging identities yet to be discovered.



In Grade 12, something happened that paved the way to my discovery as a culturally deaf person. There was an interpreter shortage, and I couldn’t attend all of the classes that I registered for. I remember showing up for a class and the interpreter was not in her typical assigned seat, and the teacher continued to speak while I looked around, feeling lost, like a fool.



That was it. The lack of accessibility led to my ultimate decision to transfer to a school for the Deaf.



Through socializing with Deaf peers, fragmented parts of my identity and soul were finally put back together and began to feel whole. This journey helped me unpack internalized audism, and change the “d” in deaf to a “D,” to represent my transition to a culturally Deaf person.



Approaching the end of high school, I thought, “What am I going to do?” I thought I’d attend a local post-secondary institution, become a teacher, and lead a very boring life, only because that’s what my family wanted for me. But what did I want? To be accepted, to be in a place where I could be myself.



That space was discovered at Gallaudet University, where I met more members of the queer and trans community. That led to me coming out, embracing different parts of my identity.



Every summer on break from university, I attended the Pride festivities in Toronto and discovered the Ontario Rainbow Alliance of the Deaf, where I met more folks like me.



But what was in my future after graduation? I wasn’t so sure yet.



Toronto was this place that I’d always dreamed of living in. This city was the place that I was going to move to after I graduated from Gallaudet University.



Being the capital city of Ontario, you’d think this city would be accessible for a person like me.



Toronto, you are exceptionally large, with a population of more than six million people in the city and its surrounding areas. Here, you can expect to find a few communities that you belong with. You’d expect more options, more resources, more identities, more accessibility, right?



The next article in this series will detail what accessibility in Toronto looks like.



SOURCE



Related: #Deaf Canadians



Related Deaf and Hearing Worlds:

Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World

Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World

Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD

Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds

A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'

Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students

Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary

Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film

The Case For Bilingual Deaf Children - UConn

Deaf News: 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 Full Article.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Director Rob Savage Talks 'Dawn of the Deaf'

VIDEO: Deaf News: Exclusive interview with director of 'Dawn of the Deaf' Rob Savage, talks the Deaf role in short horror film.



LONDON, UK -- ComingSoon: Director Rob Savage discusses his innovative new apocalyptic short horror film Dawn of the Deaf. Fresh off a triumphant, head-turning premiere at Fantastic Fest, the spectacularly inventive, gorgeously executed Dawn of the Deaf logline.



“When a strange sound wipes out the Hearing population, a small group of Deaf people must band together to survive” threatens to go ultra-viral via upcoming screenings at BFI London Film Festival, London Fright Fest, Sitges Film Festival, Encounters Short Film and Animation Festival, Uppsala International Short Film Festival, Fantasia International Film Festival and several others.





“Our aim was to create a genre film that would connect Deaf and hearing audiences in an engaging, thrilling way,” director Rob Savage tells ComingSoon.net of his apocalyptic horror short made with a cast drawn from the London Deaf community. “Rather than retread the same narratives usually seen when dealing with disability, we wanted to create a tense story in which the characters’ ‘disability’ becomes their ultimate advantage over the hearing population.”



Savage was gracious enough to speak with ComingSoon.net at length about the joys and challenges of leading that charge… Read More The Full Interview.



Follow @Dawn of the Deaf:

Facebook - https://facebook.com/dawnofthedeafshort

Twitter - https://twitter.com/dotdmovie

Official Website - http://www.dawnofthedeafmovie.com



Related Posts:

#Deaf Film - #Deaf Movie - #ASL Film - #Deaf Movie Trailer

McDonald's Refuses Interview Deaf Applicant

Deaf News: McDonald's pays up $56,000 to the EEOC after manager refuses to interview Deaf applicant in Missouri.



BELTON, MO -- (AP) McDonald's will pay a $56,500 settlement after a southeast Missouri restaurant manager refused to interview a Deaf job applicant.



The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Tuesday announced the settlement with McDonald's Corp. and McDonald's Restaurants. A message seeking comment from the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company was not immediately returned.



The EEOC says a young man who can't hear or speak applied online in 2012 to work at the McDonald's in Belton, Mo. He had previous experience as a cook and cleanup team member at a McDonald's restaurant in another state.



A lawsuit filed by the EEOC says that when the restaurant manager learned the applicant needed a sign language interpreter for his interview, she canceled the interview, even though the applicant's sister volunteered to interpret.



SOURCE



Related McDonalds:

McDonald's Charged In Discrimination Deaf Job

McDonald's Refuses Interview Deaf Applicant

Deaf Customer Upset With McDonalds Drive-Thru

Drive-Thru McDonalds Discrimination Deaf Driver

Sign Language On The McDonalds TV Ads

Saturday, October 15, 2016

'Silence is Golden' in Bali's Deaf Village

VIDEO [CC] - Deaf News: Deaf people for generations in Bali's village, everyone speaks sign language of the Indonesian island.



KIKI SIREGAR BENGKALA -- Straits Times: Balinese women dressed in gold bodices dance to rhythmic drumming while waving fans as men in purple outfits sit cross legged around them, jiggling their arms and chanting. It appears to be just another show on the Indonesian resort island, known for its ancient culture and rituals, but there is a key difference - the dancers are all Deaf and cannot hear the beat.



They perform the moves, learnt over months of hard training, from memory.



The village of Bengkala has been home to an unusually large number of Deaf people for generations, and nowadays about 40 out of its approximately 3,000 residents have severe hearing loss.





But unlike in other parts of Indonesia where they could face mistreatment, local people have taken the Deaf residents to their hearts. In many ways, life in the small hamlet has come to revolve around them.



As well as the dance project, a unique sign language called Kata Kolok has been developed in the isolated village which has been mastered by those with hearing impairment, as well as many of those who can hear, prompting interest from scientists around the world.



In addition, Deaf villagers are trained in skills such as making handicrafts that can be sold in the heaving tourist resorts of the island, and they work side by side with other villagers in the rice fields.



"Human rights are the same everywhere. So I thought, why should the Deaf be ostracised?" said Ketut Kanta, who heads a community group for the village's Deaf residents.



The approach is relatively unique in Indonesia, where the disabled often suffer harsh discrimination.



Bengkala, in northern Bali, has existed for about eight centuries.



Residents often scrape a living tending to the surrounding rice fields and education levels are generally low.



In the past, villagers thought the high incidence of deafness was due to a curse but those superstitions - and the prejudices they created - have largely been abandoned after experts concluded it was due to a recessive gene common among the local population.



It was not until the 1960s that the village began to make efforts to better integrate its Deaf residents and nowadays everyone is treated equally, according to village head I Made Arpana.



"We don't differentiate between Deaf villagers and non-deaf villagers," he said, adding that the community did not want the hard of hearing residents to feel "inferior".



A key factor in creating this peaceful co-existence has been Kata Kolok, which literally translates as "Talk of the Deaf", and is used to varying degrees by around 80 per cent of the villagers.



It is different from international and Indonesian sign language. It has grown organically over the decades and has its own unique signs created by villagers to reflect how they see the world.



Attempts to ensure harmony in the village start at a young age, with a Bengkala elementary school teaching all children side by side.



The 77 students are all given lessons in the local sign language, and are introduced to elements of Indonesian and international signing.



Made Budiasih, whose seven-year-old son goes to the school, said she was worried for his future when they discovered he was deaf at birth, but said the inclusive educational centre had made all the difference.



"I was despairing, but then I found out about this school," she said.



Still, it is not always easy teaching deaf students as they often become frustrated and act out, according to teacher I Made Wisnu, who has been working at the school for a decade.



There are no junior high schools equipped to teach Deaf students, so most have to drop out of the system once they've graduated from elementary classes.



Despite the challenges, village chief Arpana is determined to safeguard the unique culture of the hamlet's Deaf community, saying he would be a "sinner" if he did not.



The clearest expression of the village's warm embrace of its hard of hearing population is the unique project "Dance of the Deaf", which has started to draw a trickle of foreign visitors to the out-of-the-way village, giving residents hope for a brighter future.



Tambourine player I Wayan Getar, speaking in sign language through an interpreter, told AFP: "Tourists from China and Europe are coming to watch us, and they really enjoy it."



SOURCE

Saturday, October 8, 2016

The D.C. Police Department's Deaf Liaison

VIDEO: Deaf News: Meet the DC Police Department's Deaf Liaison officers.



WASHINGTON -- NBC4: For more than a decade, the D.C. police department's Deaf and Hard of Hearing Liaison Unit has been building bridges with the Deaf community.



It's the only specialized police unit in the country dedicated to protecting Deaf people.



Officer Myra Jordan came up with the idea 14 years ago. She learned sign language as a child, when she played with a neighbor who was Deaf.





The 25-year veteran of the department went to the chief with her idea to combine her love for police work and sign language.



"The Metropolitan Police Department was struggling with communicating or interacting with the Deaf community, and we needed to build that bridge," Jordan said.



She was joined on the unit two years ago by Officer Teyna Ellis. She learned how to sign so she could help at her church.



In addition to the pair's regular patrol duties, they train other officers in the basics of communicating with Deaf people, like "knowing the universal sign of a Deaf person, to be able to communicate with them during a traffic stop," Ellis said.



Advocates for the Deaf community say the liaison unit has made a particularly big impact in dealing with Deaf victims of domestic violence.



"In the past, people didn’t know who to talk with and they didn’t feel comfortable making the report because they didn’t know who is going to understand me ... but now there is someone who speaks my language," said Shazia Siddiqi. She is executive director of the organization DAWN, which aims to end abuse in the Deaf community.



Jordan said the unit's work is paying off for police and for the community. She says it comes down to one word: trust.



"The officers aren't afraid of the unknown because they know the unknown now, and the community isn't afraid because they trust the police," she said.



Ellis and Jordan regularly get requests to help train officers from other police departments. They said they're proud that D.C. is leading the nation.



SOURCE

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Deaf Interpreter Goes Viral On Social Media

VIDEO [CC] - Deaf News: Hurricane Matthew approaching South Carolina, Haley's sign language interpreter's flair gains attention of social media.



COLUMBIA, SC -- WLTX: For the last several days, standing inches away from South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley at her emergency briefings, you've likely seen Jason Hurdich.



He's the sign language interpreter who's just off to the side of the governor when she's speaking. Even though the New York native has only been in South Carolina for two months, it's his job is to make sure that everyone watching understands Hurricane Matthew's potential impact on South Carolina.



"A storm is very serious so I need to make sure that i am culturally matching what the Deaf community needs when they get their information," he said.



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


He's been interpreting for about 15 years. But as you're listening to the governor and watching Hurdich interpret for the Deaf community, he's watching Shonna McGee.



"I've worked with Jason for over 10 years and what I do in situations like this is I take the spoken information and I interpret it to him, and he clarifies and expands when necessary for the Deaf community to have clarity."



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


Hurdich is Deaf, so in this situation, the interpreter has an interpreter. So he translates what McGee hears.



It's a unique situation which means critical information doesn't get lost in translation for the Deaf community.



"Having someone who is a native to your language, giving them the information in their language is always the best, especially in critical situations like a hurricane," McGee said.



"My goal is really to empower the Deaf community to really thrive and encourage them to do that and improve their quality of life," Hurdich said. "The South Carolina Deaf community really needs Deaf leaders and nationwide also."



Interpreting is not Hurdich's full time job. he currently works as a counselor for vocational rehab in Charleston.



SOURCE



Related Hurricane Matthew:

Hurricane Matthew 'Skull' In Eerie Satellite Image



Related Terps Goes Viral:

Deaf Interpreter Goes Viral On Social Media

Houston's ASL Interpreter Steals The Show

Sign Language Interpreter Goes Viral During Ebola Press Conference

Lydia Callis: Bloomberg's Interpreter Goes Viral

De Blasio's Deaf Interpreter Steals Spotlight

Cyclone Sign Language Guy Goes Viral

Eurovision Sign Language Interpreter Is A Web Hit



Related Terps Parodies/Spoofs:

SNL Spoofs Fake Sign Language Interpreter Skit

Your Jokes About Bloomberg's Sign Language Interpreters Aren't Funny

'SNL' Opening Skit Puts Sign Language Interpreter Front & Center

Marlee Matlin Upset Over 'SNL' Sign Language Skit

ASL Interpreters Mocking Video Compilation

Lydia Callis, Bloomberg Interpreter Goes Viral



Related Fake Interpreter:

Deaf Outraged Over Fake Sign Language Interpreter At Mandela Memorial

Marlee Matlin Reacts To The 'Fake' Interpreter

NAD Says 'Fake' Interpreter Signing Gibberish

Real Interpreter of the Nelson Mandela Memorial

I'm Schizophrenic, Says 'Fake' Interpreter

'Fake' Sign Language Interpreter Defends Himself

ASL Morning Message: 'Fake Interpreter'

#FakeInterpreter - Rights For Deaf Children

Deaf Advocates Asks Europe Union For Interpreter Standards

Saturday, October 1, 2016

What ‘Deaf’ Means To Me - Amanda McDonough

VIDEO [CC] - What ‘Deaf’ means to me with Amanda McDonough.



Deaf activist, actress and Youtuber Amanda McDonough discussion and conversation questions about "What "Deaf" Means to Me" she wanted to talk about something she have been thinking a lot about recently and that is the word "DEAF." Now she grew up in hearing culture in the United States.



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I grew up with hearing family, hearing friends, going to a mainstream school and I didn't have access to signing. I didn't have access to Deaf people and... So, growing up for me that word "DEAF" scared me, because for me, before, that meant that I was going to lose my hearing. That meant that I was going to lose access to oral communication. That meant I might lose my family and my friends. That was scary for me. It was really scary. And it wasn't until after I became physically Deaf that I started searching for people like me and I started searching for a better way to communicate. And I found that in Deaf Culture, in sign language, in the Deaf community.



Now that i am a proud Deaf woman that word death means something so different to me. So, I wanted to share with you what word "DEAF" means to me now.



Now the word "DEAF" means strength. It means having the strength to accept yourself for who you really are. It also means support; having the support of the Deaf community. Having people around me that understand what i go through every single day, all of my struggles. They understand me, they really understand. It also means communication, because now I have this beautiful language that I can always understand I don't have have to struggle with and I have access to communication through new technology like VoIP and oh captioned phones. Different things that help me communicate better. It also, lastly, means intelligence. Why? Because deaf people; we have to be able to think creatively. We have to be able to think outside the box so that we can create new solutions to problems that we have, that don't depend on hearing, and that takes intelligence. So, this is what my new meaning of the word "DEAF" is.



What does "DEAF" mean to you?



SOURCE



Follow @Amanda McDonough

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Related Amanda McDonough:

DeafNation World Expo - Amanda McDonough

Myths or Facts: Can Deaf People Drive ?

Facts & Myths About Deaf People

Myths & Facts About Deaf Children

5 Deaf Myths Busted With Amanda McDonough

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

The Deaf Body in Public Space - NY Times

Deaf News: The Deaf Body in Public Space from New York Times.



NEW YORK CITY -- “It’s rude to point,” my friend told me from across the elementary-school cafeteria table. I grasped her words as I read them off her lips. She stared at my index finger, which I held raised in midair, gesturing toward a mutual classmate. “My mom said so.”



I was 6 or 7 years old, but I remember stopping with a jolt. Something inside me froze, too, went suddenly cold.



“I’m signing,” I said out loud. “That’s not rude.”



As the only Deaf student in my elementary school, I had already stumbled across the challenges of straddling two languages and two modes of communication. My family was hearing, but they still empowered me by using both English and sign language at home.



A sign language interpreter accompanied me throughout the day at school, and my teachers created a welcoming environment for me to learn, but finding a place to belong with kids my own age often felt more difficult. I tried to speak to them, and occasionally they reciprocated the effort by learning some basic signs. But usually I felt separate.



I went home that day and asked my mother about what my friend had said. “Don’t worry,” my mother said, “she doesn’t know the social rules are different with signing. You aren’t being rude.” With that, matter-of-fact as always, she brought the conversation to an end. But I still felt a lingering self-consciousness, entirely novel and difficult to shake.



This was perhaps the first time I realized that other people could see me as obtrusive, as taking up too much space, when I was simply communicating just as I was.



When I reflect on this memory two decades later, I recognize how my childhood friend, whom at the time I had found to be so accusatory, had really gaped at me with a sort of wonder. My signing challenged the rules of social conduct she’d absorbed from adults, and to her I must have seemed ignorant or radically rebellious, or perhaps both. But pointing was a truly fundamental act for me; it was how I expressed what my grown-up scholarly self would call relationality - the idea of being in the world in relation to others. Through sign language, a properly poised finger allowed me to say you and me and he and she and they. If I did not point, how could I make a human connection? ... Read More at New York Times.

Monday, September 26, 2016

Pocoyo Inspires Deaf Culture, Brings Awareness

VIDEO: Pocoyo wishes every children a Happy International Day of the Deaf.





A popular Spanish TV programme aimed at Deaf preschoolers, with 20 seconds footage clip in English subtitles showing the animated cartoon character of a 4-year-old boy ‘Pocoyo’s communicating with sign language "Hello to all the Deaf children in the world. I'm Pocoyo."





Pocoyo is a curious, fun-loving, friendly toddler who's always into experiencing new and exciting adventures. Featuring core values of tolerance, respect, love and loyalty, kids around the world love to join Pocoyo's adventures with his inseparable animal friends Elly (the elephant), Pato (the duck), Loula (his pet dog) and Sleepy Bird.



Subscribe to The English Channel on YouTube: https://youtube.com/pocoyousa



Pocoyo Disco - http://bit.ly/pocoyodiscoen



90 minutes of Pocoyo:

Part 1 - http://youtu.be/dDP-jzPV5fo

Part 2 - http://youtu.be/Xhm1HfmCJ8A

Part 3 - http://youtu.be/GB8itsBy74M



Pocoyo (Pocoyó in Spanish) is a Spanish-British pre-school animated television series created by Guillermo García Carsí, Colman López, Luis Gallego and David Cantolla, and is a co-production between Spanish producer Zinkia Entertainment, Cosgrove-Hall Films and Granada International - Read More at Wikipedia.



Follow @Pocoyo (English)

Apps - http://www.pocoyo.com/en/apps

Facebook - https://facebook.com/pocoyo

Instagram - https://instagram.com/pocoyo

Twitter - http://twitter.com/pocoyo_us

Merch - http://pocoyofficialstore.com/en

GooglePlus - http://gplus.to/pocoyoen

Website - http://www.pocoyo.com/en



Related International Week of the Deaf:

IWD 2016 - ‘With Sign Language, I Am Equal’

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Deaf School Children Sign The 9/11 Story

VIDEO [CC] - Deaf News: Deaf school children in Texas use sign language to paint a powerful portrait of what happened on Sept. 11.



USA Today - Teaching 9/11: “To them, it’s history, just like Pearl Harbor,” said Chris Causey, a middle school educator in Robertson County, Tenn. So, as the memories fade, teachers feel challenged to teach 9/11 in some way that is relevant to all ages in the United States.



In some schools in New Jersey, third graders learn about the K9 rescue teams while 12th graders discuss methods of prisoner interrogation. In Tennessee, older students at Stratford High School conduct a mock rescue at the World Trade Center; others arrange their desks like the seats of an airplane while Williamson County social studies teacher Kenneth Roeten asks students about their everyday morning routines and compares them to headlines just before the attacks.



Deaf school children in Texas use sign language to paint a powerful portrait of what happened on Sept. 11.



“I personally cannot think of any other event in American history that has had more of an impact on how everyday Americans live their life,” Roeten wrote in an email. “It has had a profound impact on my life; therefore, I believe it to be my duty as an educator to never stop teaching the shock, horror, sadness and utter disbelief of that day.”



But how? That's what school systems around the country are wrestling with now.



“I don’t think there’s a school system that has said ‘We’re going to focus on this,'” said Colleen Tambuscio, a teacher at New Milford High School in New Jersey who helped write a 9/11 curriculum through the New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education in collaboration with the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in Manhattan. “I think what has happened in New Jersey - we’ve had moments of silence; we’ve had commemorative acts that were important. But now we should be getting into the educational piece, where we’re doing more with the education. That’s the trajectory.”



The lessons from the curriculum Tambuscio helped write include political and religious discussions; the history and present state of Islamic extremists; the global impact of the day economically; the ensuing wars; the backlash against Muslims; the change in day-to-day security and privacy implications; the huge personal tragedy; as well as stories of the first responders, extraordinary acts by ordinary citizens and the mission of service many felt afterward... Reaf The Full Story.

Booming Cochlear Implants in Indiana State

Deaf News: As more Deaf students use cochlear implants, Indiana schools work to adapt due to gaining popularity.



INDIANAPOLIS, IN -- Public schools in Indiana serve about 2,400 students who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing. Of those students a growing number now use cochlear implants, small medical devices that stimulate nerves in the inner ear and give a sense of hearing.



As technology develops, and cochlear implants become more common, many public schools are still working to catch up.



“I like to think that it’s not malicious, it’s just that most of these smaller districts don’t have the training and the knowledge to really be able to understand what these kids need,” says Ellyn McCall, family liaison at hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana.



As the number of students with cochlear implants grow, advocates like McCall say there’s often a disconnect between services schools offer and services these students need.



Brandy Hauser, of Spencer, IN, had never been more excited. She was a brand new mom. Like all Indiana parents since 1999, she watched as doctors took her newborn daughter Grace for a hearing screening.



Then a nurse came back.



“She [gave] me a little card and said that your daughter didn’t pass the infant hearing screening test,” Hasuer says.



Grace has mondini dysplasia, an inner ear malformation that results in profound deafness.



“After that it was like a whirlwind of ‘What do we do?,’” Hauser says.



For communication, the options can come from two schools of thought.



There’s the well-known route: use sign language. Or the newer option gaining popularity: cochlear implants and spoken language.



Hauser chose the second. At 18 months, Grace had an implant surgically attached to her skull.



“She was sitting in her little car seat stroller. We had her sitting up in there, and they turned her on. It was just like the shine of a Christmas light in her face when she, you know, clapped and she looked,” Hauser says. “It was the first time that I knew, ok, she looked. Ok, we’ve got this.”



But when Grace got to school, things became complicated. Hearing with cochlear implants is not traditional hearing. It takes time to ‘learn to hear.’



“When sentence writing started coming around, and the structure of sentences.. [It] was very hard for her to make a sentence that would be correct,” Hauser says.



Hauser says that’s largely because services from the school district weren’t geared for Deaf kids who, through technology, were also learning to hear and speak.



Instead, the focus was American Sign Language, where grammar is different.



Students like Grace are already outliers in the state. She’s one of nine Deaf or Hard of Hearing students in the Spencer-Ownens Community Schools district of 2,600 students. That’s one-third of one percent of the entire student body.



That’s typical for most Indiana school districts. Public districts, outside of the Indiana School for the Deaf, have eight deaf or hard of hearing students, on average.



Melissa Lancaster heads the organization that provides special education for Grace’s school district, Spencer-Owens Community schools.



“We look at what they’re needing and what services can we provide to meet that,” Lancaster says. “The only challenge is making sure that we’re up to speed on the cochlear implant and what’s needed with that.”



Challenges - and debates - around educating students who are Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing are nothing new to Indiana. Indiana is home to the Indiana School for the Deaf - an institution that specializes in giving students who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing an American Sign Language and English bilingual education.



As technology developed, lawmakers said the ISD was not giving students enough experience in a newly available hearing culture. School officials pushed back, but the state diverted funding from the school to create the Indiana Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Education.



It’s goal? Provide information regarding all communication opportunities to families, from American Sign Language to spoken language.



Deaf or Hard of Hearing students bring their districts about $8,000 each in extra state funding, but advocates say that amount doesn’t necessary cover expensive services that help students with cochlear implants, like therapy, closed-captioning and teacher microphone systems.



“That has to cover lot’s of things,” says Naomi Horton, executive director of hearing loss advocacy group Hear Indiana. “It’s not enough money in most cases to cover the special education costs.”



But there’s a catch. Under federal law, school districts are obligated to provide all students with a free and adequate education. In other words, they can’t say a necessary special education accommodation is beyond their budget. And she says, that can put cash-strapped schools in a tricky position.



Ellyn McCall, the family liason at Hear Indiana, says it makes a big difference when services are tailored for children with cochlear implants. She says it has made a big difference for her son Seth.



Today, Seth is 8 years old. He’s in a traditional classroom, and says he learns things like the definition of “busybody.”



“‘Busybody’ is when you’re being nosy and you’re listening to someone else’s conversation,” Seth says.



Because there is evidence that early services can mean big results for students like Seth in the long run, some parents don’t want to wait for their districts to provide them.



Kendra Bowden’s son Wyatt has cochlear implants. On his third birthday, Bowden says he still had the language skills of a child half his age.



Bowden lives in Terre Haute, but she decided to send Wyatt to St. Joseph Institute for the Deaf, a private school that specializes in educating children with cochlear implants. It’s in Indianapolis. An hour and a half away.



“We didn’t want to actually send him because it’s far for us, it’s far for him it’s hard on him it’s hard on us, he’s our baby he’s never even been to daycare,” Bowden said. “But that school is only there for preschool.”



It’s almost seven hours total of driving there and back, to and from school each day. But Bowden hopes it will be worth it after preschool.



“I think it’s gonna be worth it in the long run,” Bowden said. “It’s not forever, it’s maybe a couple of years.”



Studies show getting children with cochlear implants specialized services early can be worth if for the state financially, too. The state can save over $200,000 per student that would otherwise go to state services, like special education and auditory rehabilitation.



SOURCE

Maria Siebald - Musicals For Deaf People

VIDEO [CC] - Chilean artist Maria Siebald helps Deaf people experience the depth of music through live performances and videos.



Siebald makes music videos and performances for Deaf people. She uses sign language throughout the performance to help them feel the depths of the music.





To learn more about Maria Siebald, visit https://mariasiebald.wordpress.com



Shot by Diego Marín Verdugo for AJ+.



Follow AJ+:

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Thursday, August 25, 2016

How Deaf Drivers Can Be Safe From Police

VIDEO: Deaf News - After Deaf man is killed by cop, here's how hearing impaired drivers can be safe in the United States.





NEW YORK CITY -- The recent fatal shooting of a Deaf driver by a police officer in North Carolina has raised questions about safety for hearing impaired motorists.



Jennifer Labriola, the principal of the New York School for the Deaf who drives to work each day, told Inside Edition through a sign language interpreter that if a hearing impaired driver is pulled over, "you tell the police officer you're Deaf and 'I need to write this down.' You point to your ear."





SOURCE



Top 5 Cameras To Protect Drivers From Police Abuse - You never know when a naked guy on PCP is going to jump on the hood of your car. Or If you see the police and start sweating bullets for no reason, check out these dashboard cams for paranoid drivers. Police abuse seems to be a growing concern, and nervous drivers want to make sure they capture the abuse. Who knows how you will use it, since recording some fun footage is a possibility too... Read more at Clapway.



Related Stories:

Deaf Man Killed In Shooting By State Police

Family of Deaf Father Killed by Police Speak Out

Friday, August 19, 2016

Deaf Man Killed In Shooting By State Police

VIDEO: Deaf News: Deaf man fatally shot by trooper after chase in Charlotte.



CHARLOTTE, NC -- A man killed by a state trooper in northeast Charlotte after a traffic stop escalated into a chase is Deaf, according to neighbors.



Investigators say Trooper Jermaine Saunders attempted to pull over a Volvo on 485 for speeding. However, they say the driver, Daniel Kevin Harris, did not stop.



The chase continued off 485, to Rocky River Road exit, eventually ending at Seven Oaks Drive with both vehicles damaged.





"I was here in my driveway and I saw the highway patrol car come through and it was smoking really bad," said Mark Barringer. "About 10 seconds later, I heard one gunshot."



Barringer says when he went to take a closer look, he saw Harris in the middle of the street. He died just a few feet from his front door. Several neighbors have put flowers near where Harris took his final breaths.



"It was surreal, you just don't expect to see something like that," said Barringer. "When the gunshot went off, it was scary."



Detectives say Trooper Saunders and Harris got into "an encounter" before he fired his weapon. Neighbors say Harris' car spun out of control and was shot almost immediately after exiting the vehicle.





They say Harris was likely trying to communicate with the trooper using sign language before he was killed.



"They should've deescalated and been trained to realize that this is an entirely different situation, you're pulling someone over who is Deaf, they are handicapped," said Barringer. "To me, what happened is totally unacceptable."



Trooper Saunders has been placed on administrative leave.



The SBI is leading the investigation. They say they will review dash and body cam videos from Highway Patrol and CMPD.



SOURCE



Related Story:

Family of Deaf Father Killed by Police Speak Out

How Deaf Drivers Can Be Safe From Police