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Chapter 3 Celina Biado
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Word-search activity
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Upon completion of this chapter students will be able to… Understand the importance of the Gallaudet protest. Explain the difference between Oralism and ASL Discuss mainstreaming and why some deaf people perceive this as a threat.
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Golden Rule Be on time Have FUN through learning Be prepared Participate
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1988. Gallaudet University, a university for the deaf, student body and alumni protest. Deaf President. Deaf Power. Roar for rebellion. Deafness was not a disability, but a culture. Celebrate differences. Their disability will always matter.
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Jane Bassett Spilman Chairwoman of Gallauet’s board of trustees Elizabeth Zinser
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Martha’s Vineyard first deaf resident, Jonathan Lambert (1694) Citizens lived similar lives. Deafness was ordinary, not a sickness. 19 th century 1 in 25 residents in Chilmark was deaf. 1 in 4 in another neighborhood
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Laurent ClercThomas Hopkins Gallaudet
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Gardiner Greene Hubbard Mabel Gardiner Hubbard Alexander Graham Bell
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Oralism: Universal teaching method for the deaf to communicate using speech and lip reading rather than sign language. 1880, International Congress of Educators of the Deaf, in Milan. Mastered by those who became deaf after already having language. Educators insisted teaching oralism, deaf students’ academic achievement decreased.
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Cued Speech, 1966, used 14 handshapes formed near the mouth to signal a speech- reader the sound being made, in order to distinguish similarly formed words. Total Communication, 1970s, combination of speech and signed English. Sim Com, requires teachers to sign and speak simultaneously.
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ASL – American Sign Language. Used in 1850s, taught at American Asylum for the Deaf. More effective. Students were equally literate as their hearing peers. Not English, but has its own syntax and grammar. Separate language that belongs to people who are deaf at birth or before they learn to speak. Deaf babies using ASL can sign the same amount of words as hearing babies by the age of 5. Rarely taught today. Most teachers use a signed version of English.
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Eugenics: Suggested laws to forbid intermarriage of deaf-mutes. Strong advocate for the deaf and believed in mainstreaming. NO to separate language and culture. Disabled people instinctively understood, prejudice cut deepest when it came from the charitable, not from the most bigoted.
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Group up and read about one of the following people. Discuss their ideas and its significance for the deaf movement. Judy Heumann pg. 101 Robert Funk pg. 103
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