Thursday, September 25, 2008
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Check out this great Blog: Ka'lalau's Korner
Deaf culture as an authentic culture
Every community has an undercurrent of feeling that is unique. So does the Deaf community.What I mean by an undercurrent of feeling is not psychological but rather philosophical; it is about "personality" that is reflected in our thoughts, behavior, communication, and even physical bearing (non-manual expressions). Every person shares in it to some degree in how they develop their own individual feeling within the community.
continue reading this blog...clickhere:
http://carl-schroeder.blogspot.com/2008/07/deaf-culture-as-authentic-culture.html
Monday, September 22, 2008
Happy National Deaf Week!
According to the World Federation of the Deaf (WFD) the situation of the approximately 72 million Deaf people around the world is still shocking especially in the developing countries where about 80 % of the Deaf live. Social services, education and interpreter service system are often out of reach especially for African Deaf.
“Due to the fact that good command of sign language as well as education reached in sign language opens doors for Deaf people’s integration into the society, one should provide Deaf children with an opportunity to acquire the local sign language and guarantee the right to education in this language”, asserts Mr Markku Jokinen, President of the World Federation of the Deaf. Based on new research information the bilingual approach to education is common in only 27 % of the countries. This means that students are taught in sign language as first language and written oral language as
second language. Almost half of the education is still accomplished using the oral method which jeopardizes access to information and services for Deaf leaving them in the margins of the society. For most Deaf in developing countries university studies are still something to dream about and initiating vocational studies is almost as rare. Prejudices towards sign languages as well as lack of competent teachers in sign language complicate organizing education in the
way that would be the most optimum way for Deaf.
According to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) that entered into force in May, state governments shall recognize sign language as an official language in the Constitution and/or special legislation, ensure professional interpreter services and guarantee bilingual education to Deaf people. Solely this way the Deaf people’s Human Rights - still so blatantly violated around the world - will be assured in the future.
• 1 % of the documents that States provide are available in sign language – this prohibits most of the Deaf access to information
• 32 % of the Deaf are denied right to drivers licence – they are considered as a threat to the traffic in many countries
• sign language has an official status in the legislation either guaranteed by the constitution, other legislation or policies in 42 % of the countries. However, in practice the resources for providing services are nil
• in 6 % of the states the decision makers believe that Deaf people don’t have any right to education at all
• states have problems in providing education in sign language in all phases of the system, especially for kindergarten age children and young adults
Additional information:
World Federation of the Deaf, Mr Colin Allen and Ms Meri Hyrske-Fischer, tel. +358 50 4388370
Legal Seat – Helsinki, Finland
This information was founded by: WORLD FEDERATION OF THE DEAF
An International Non-Governmental Organisation in official liaison with ECOSOC, UNESCO, ILO, WHO and the
Council of Europe
PO Box 65, FIN-00401 Helsinki, FINLAND
FAX: +358 9 5803 572
www.wfdeaf.org
PRESS RELEASE
19.8.2008
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Akron's Carousel Dinner Theatre presents....
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Get your tickets now! They're selling fast!
http://www.carouseldinnertheatre.com/season08.htm#Oz
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
The New York Times, "Hands That Speak, Hands That Rhyme"
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ON the fourth Monday of every month, the spoken word gives way to the signed at the Bowery Poetry Club. Jason Norman, the host, casts his microphone stand to the side and introduces the A.S.L. Slam, a free-form poetry and storytelling night for the American Sign Language community.
“This,” signs the puckish M.C. with cropped brown hair, “is your stage.”
On a recent evening, participants included a white-haired gentleman in a yarmulke, a Harvard-educated actress in her late 20s named Shira Grabelsky and Bram Weiser, a hearing computer specialist for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority who is an aspiring interpreter. Many favor humorous anecdotes in lieu of poems.
American Sign Language, which is more than 150 years old, is a language that its users say is entirely independent of English, though it is not universally recognized as such. Indeed, A.S.L. is also entirely independent of British Sign Language, and has more in common with French Sign Language.
“Sometimes I wish we had a rule book,” Mr. Norman said of the poetry, through an interpreter, “but A.S.L. hasn’t really even been accepted as a language.”
Repetition of certain hand shapes can represent rhyme just as sounds in spoken poetry produce structure; the pattern of holds and pauses recalls the meter and rhythm of spoken verse. Yet these devices represent approximations.
“I think there’s rhyme in A.S.L.,” Mr. Norman considered. “Or maybe not rhyme. Maybe it’s a beat.” He performs his poems with intricate physicality, with careful and detailed expression.
The event at the club, on the Bowery near East First Street, attracts as many as 50 people, a mix of the deaf and hearing A.S.L. students. On this evening, as with many, some told stories rather than poems, performing with a wit that delighted the room.
Paul Mitchell, a young man wearing baggy jeans and a baseball cap, mimed the perfect impression of how, after a stumble on the street, a white guy might cower while a black guy might morph his misstep into the perfect mock layup. Applause, expressed visually, came as the waving of both hands.
People who can hear, Mr. Norman says, often see A.S.L. as “beautiful” in its movement, dancelike, yet devoid of the precision of speech. But of course language is meant to be understood. “To say A.S.L. is beautiful,” Mr. Norman said, “is a compliment with an insult behind it.”
Still, a language’s youth carries benefits for poetry. “Its rules aren’t frozen yet,” Mr. Norman said. “It’s living and breathing. Deaf children are natural storytellers.”
Friday, September 12, 2008
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Rufener Hilltop Farms
Join the Deaf Advisory Committee and CSD for our 3rd annual Fall Festival get together!
WHERE: Rufener Hilltop Farms
1022 State Route 43
Suffield, Ohio 44260
WHEN: Meet on Saturday at 11am, October 11, 2008
COST: $5 per person
Includes: Maize, Pony Rides, Petting Zoo, Pumpkin Playhouse, Jumping House, Face Paintitng, Hayride, and much more!
Bring your friends and Family!
RAFFLE 50/50
Contact DAC if you have any further questions:
AkronDAC@greenleafctr.org
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