Friday, April 24, 2015

DEAF TEACHERS FOR DEAF STUDENTS' BETTER RESULTS


Inclusive education for me entails not only educating challenged children, but incorporating teachers with disabilities as well. One of my relatives, an extremely talented secondary school teacher, had to quit after the hearing loss. Since that time I have a personal inclination to know more about deafness. How are students with hearing difficulties educated?  What is the place in the world for mute people? Having  reviewed the literature I will argue that inclusive education for mute students will gain significantly from training and hiring deaf teachers.
According to the statistics, more than 90% of the deaf children are born from hearing parents (Shantie & Hoffmeister, 2000). Consequently, the hearing parents of deaf children struggle with providing a role model for a deaf child to acquire a sign language. In this case the children’s first language is a language of gestures and signs. Shantie and Hoffmeister (2000) postulate that second language acquisition for mute students will lead to prominent results provided the deaf instructors, especially in the critical period of language acquisition – early childhood. Thus, deaf and hard of hearing pupils will successfully learn a second language if they have a signed language role model (Shantie & Hoffmeister, 2000).
History knows the examples of deaf teachers who contributed to the mute students’ progress. Roberto Francisco Prádez was the first deaf teacher in Spain who had not only successfully taught the deaf children, but also succeeded to establish the school for deaf in Madrid in the 19th century (Plann, 1992). Prádez is illustrated as a man who notwithstanding the hearing loss became an influential educator and a role model for his students (Plann, 1992). Another example comes from  history of deaf education in the USA. Deaf Louis Laurent Marie Clerc together with Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet founded the American School for the Deaf while William Willard was the first deaf school principal and founder of the Indiana School for the Deaf. Consequently, history exemplifies that the deaf educators can make a significant impact for the deaf community.
Some teachers in the mainstream teachers are reluctant to support deaf or hard-hearing students. Vermeulen, Denessen, and Knoors (2011) discovered that many teachers were quite skeptical about the efficacy of inclusion of mute students into an ordinary classroom. Furthermore, this study revealed that teachers’ motivation directly correlated with the deaf students’ behavior and academic performance. Thus, negative for well performing students and negative attitudes for students struggling academically. To my mind, mainstream educators are far from fully understanding the sufferings of the hard of hearing students. The ordinary practitioners can get annoyed by the necessity of teaching regular and special needs students. Therefore, I argue that deaf teachers can furnish deaf pupils with more comprehensible input and support because they precisely know their needs
Sometimes deafness in education becomes a hindrance; sometimes deafness becomes a resource. Mainstream educators are often unware of dealing with deaf students whereas deaf teachers know it inside out based on their own lived experience. Providing a room for deaf educators we can make an impact the community living in the silence. Fruitful collaboration of deaf teachers and deaf students is backed up by the empirical research. I wish Kazakhstan borrowed not only the fashionable educational practices, but also the experience of deaf education. Then my relative could have an opportunity to stay, but not to leave behind educational system.

References

 Plann, S.(1992). Roberto Francisco Prádez: Spain's first deaf teacher of the deaf. American Annals of the Deaf, 137(1), 48-55. doi:10.1353/aad.2012.0398

Shantie, C., & Hoffmeister, R. J. (2000). Why schools for deaf children should hire deaf teachers: A preschool issue. The Journal of Education, 182(3), 37-47.

Vermeulen, J. A., Denessen, E., & Knoors, H. (2012). Mainstream teachers about including deaf or hard of hearing students. Teaching and Teacher Education, 28(2), 174-181.

4 comments:

  1. 3. Thank you, Aisara. Recently I’ve seen an interesting video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otUJzNtRPhw) about one deaf guy, who one day just went out and was totally surprised that passers-by told with him in sign-language. It was a flesh-mob, which his sister made for him. After watching the video I’ve realized that it is so terrible to go in the street and hear nothing, to see other people chatting with each other and not being able to say something to them. How easy (I think it is less difficult than learning English) to learn the sign-language in order to deaf people can talk to you even some useful phrases.
    Talking about education, this is the same. Deaf teachers, of course, feel freer to teach deaf students. However, all teachers as all people can learn the sigh-language and this will be one more step to a society, which worries about its all members.

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  2. In Semey, there is a school for deaf and mute children. All the staff working there are healthy people. They are professional in teaching and educating children with disabilities mentioned above, as they know the sign – language and the methodology of teaching such children well. They had special preparatory course in Almaty School, which now helps them to work with deaf and mute children. This example shows that there is no requirement for the teacher to have the same disabilities as children have to teach them. Moreover, those teachers who are without the same impairments are more qualified in this work.

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  3. Dear Aisara,
    Thank you for such informative post! I agree that is important for teacher t understand unseen world f their students. And I think your relative who lost his/her hearing ability in the middle adulthood and who had already teaching experience could become a perfect teacher for deaf children and give them explicit knowledge. However, it often happens that those who are deaf from their childhood have their own reality and something can be unclear for them. In this case there is a concern about the validity of knowledge that they can share with the children.
    Speaking about mainstream teachers, during the data collection I asked teachers, who work in an inclusive class with three deaf children, what could help them to enhance academic and social achievements of their students? And it was interesting to know that one teacher thinks that it is essential to knowing of the first language of deaf children could help them to explain difficult things, thus engaging those children in the learning process.
    So in my opinion it is enough for teachers to know mute language and there is no necessity to be deaf themselves.

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  4. wow! impressed! Dear, Aisara, thanks a lot for sharing such interesting topic about deaf education. I do completely agree with you that everything in depends on how people look to the issue. If for one country deaf people are pressure, depending on government and to other country it could turn to the resource... I wish one day your relative could get full time meaningful occupation and become an active part of society.

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