Sabtu, 30 Maret 2013

Waitress Teaching Fellow Employees Sign Language

VIDEO [CC] - Local Waitress teaching fellow employees sign language for school project.



KDKA PITTSBURGH - “Hello, welcome to Kings. My name is Ashley. I’m your server. What can I get you to drink?”



Waitress Ashley Carney uses sign language as she waits on Taylor Doyka. Taylor, Deaf since birth, appreciates the effort made on her behalf.



Her friend, Emily Gabriel, herself a part-time waitress at Kings in Delmont, taught fellow employees the art of sign language.



“Emily had everyone come back in the back and we all came in and learned a little bit of everything,” Ashley recalls. “She went through as much as she could, and then we tried to copy her.”





Emily is a junior, minoring in sign language, at Saint Francis University in Loretto. As part of a class project, she asked manager Jim Pochedly if she could teach sign language to a couple of waitresses.



“He was actually like, why don’t you teach everyone?” Emily says. “And it just kind of snowballed.” She’s thrilled by the response of fellow waitresses. ...Read more: http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2013/03/28/local-waitress-teaching-fellow-employees-sign-language-for-school-project/

Sign Language Advocates Create Visual Book For Deaf & Hearing Students

VIDEO: Sign language advocates create visual book for Deaf and Hearing students.



The Boy Who Cried Wolf, The Princess and the Pea and Rapunzel are classic children’s stories that have been adapted, retold and redrawn in classrooms and homes over and over again.



But Dublin resident Laurie Meyer has found a new way to tell those stories: through American Sign Language. She believes the books her company, ASL Tales, is creating can revolutionize the way all children, Deaf and Hearing, learn about and access language.



“We don’t want to be targeted as a book for kids with disabilities,” said Meyer, co-founder of ASL Tales. Instead, her team is thinking, “How can we change the world if everybody had access to this language?”



ASL Tales published its first book in 2008, and its latest project, The Boy Who Cried Wolf, will be released next month. Each book comes with a DVD on which a professional retells the story in sign language, going page by page alongside the illustrations. The DVDs also offer clues that help viewers break down what the signs mean and how they fit together.



Meyer and ASL Tales’s co-founder Pinky Aiello have worked with people from across the country to create the books, but The Boy Who Cried Wolf was made almost exclusively by New Hampshire residents. Concord residents H. Dee and Connie Clanton did the sign language and illustrations for the book, respectively, and other contributors come from Bedford, Dover, Manchester and elsewhere. Parents, teachers and others who want to purchase the books can find more information online at asltales.net.



The goal of ASL Tales is to help children learn language in a visually rich way, and they are not meant exclusively for people who want to become fluent in sign language.



“You don’t have to be curious about American Sign Language to have these books be helpful, that’s the part that people have the hardest time understanding,” Meyer said.



Visual learning can improve the way hearing students learn language, and it allows students with disabilities or language problems to understand stories and words in a different way, Meyer said. The books have also been translated into several other languages, including Arabic, French and Portuguese.



“One of the things that I’ve said for a long time is that ASL, I think, could be a universal precaution against language delay,” Meyer said.



Although the company has been producing books for nearly five years, its been difficult to get the books into classrooms, Meyer said. Many librarians will put them into the section for students with disabilities, but the books are meant for all children, she said.



Another goal of ASL Tales is correcting misunderstandings about what American Sign Language is, she said. Sign language is not simply stringing together a series of signs for different words. Like any language, there is a specific way to put signs together to construct sentences and communicate messages. ...READ MORE: http://www.concordmonitor.com/community/town-by-town/concord/5331184-95/sign-language-advocates-create-visual-book-for-hearing-and-deaf-students



ASL Tales The Princess and the Pea.


Alisha says, "Hi, I'm Alisha Bronk and I want to tell you about an exciting new book with an ASL DVD.



The ASL storytelling, done by Pinky Aiello, will delight Deaf people, Children of Deaf Adults (CODAs), grandparents, students, interpreters, and anyone interested in learning sign language. Please check www.ASLTales.net. It's worth your time!

Break The Silence Run: Stop Deaf Child Sexual Abuse

VIDEO: CEBU CITY, PHILIPPINES - Gualandi Volunteer Service Programme, Inc (GVSP) continues its mission for the Deaf community to live in a deaf-inclusive society. Established in 2005, the non-stock, non-profit organization has been working with volunteers in projects for and with the Deaf community.



Deaf children and women are vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. In a study conducted by the Philippine Deaf Resource Center, it was revealed that 65-70 percent of Deaf boys and girls are being molested. The large amount of cases continues to rise and remains concealed. However, the Deaf community receives little attention.



GVSP Break the Silence Documentary.


In an effort to raise awareness on putting a stop to the increasing number of cases of sexual abuse of Deaf children and women, the five-year program Break the Silence Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Network Project was started by GVSP under the guidance of Stairway Foundation, Inc. It focuses on abuse prevention, identification and response and advocacy both in the hearing and Deaf community through different projects set in agencies, schools and communities.



The sense of urgency on this issue also paved the way in the organization of a run for a cause event by GVSP entitled Break the Silence Run: Stop Deaf Child Sexual Abuse. It is set to happen on April 21, 2013, Sunday, 5:30 a.m. at Ayala Center Cebu Terraces, Cebu Business Park.



There will be four categories: the regular 4K, 8K and 16K and a separate category for Persons with Disabilities (wheelchair, blind and deaf). ...READ MORE: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/300871/cbb/break-the-silence-run-stop-deaf-child-sexual-abuse



Break the Silence: A GVSP initiative in creating a Deaf child sexual abuse prevention and exploitation network in the Philippines in partnership with the Stairway Foundation,Inc., the Australian Agency for International Development (AUSAID) Lets combat and stop the rising cases of child sexual abuse in the Philippines. Defend and protect the Deaf. Lets empower them. Support GVSP! SAVE the Deaf children and women! credits by: Julie Rose Benabaye of the De LaSalle College of St.Benilde, SDA.

Jumat, 29 Maret 2013

Deaf Patient Denied Interpreter By Scottish Hospital

Deaf patient left unable to communicate with hospital staff for 12 days after staff failed to provide sign language expert.



DUNDEE - A Deaf patient was left isolated and unable to communicate for 12 days in Ninewells Hospital because of a failure to provide her with access to a sign language interpreter, according to a report by Scotland’s public services watchdog.



The female patient who had been admitted to Dundee’s Ninewells Hospital for surgery to have her appendix removed had a very limited lip reading ability and did not have a good understanding of written English.



And it was “impossible to say” with any certainty whether the deaf patient had given informed consent for the surgery,



Jim Martin, the Scottish public services ombudsman, has ruled that NHS Tayside failed to adhere to the board’s informed consent policy and found that the failure to obtain a sign language interpreter for the patient was “unacceptable”.



He states in his report that a complaint had been raised on behalf of the patient, known as Ms A, that the board failed to provide a British Sign Language (BSL) interpreter during her 12-day stay at Ninewells where she had been admitted for surgery to remove her appendix.



Ms A was a BSL user with very limited lip-reading ability. She did not use verbal communication and did not have a good understanding of written English.



Mr Martin states: “Although hospital staff took steps to try to communicate with Ms A, at no point did they provide an interpreter. This was despite Ms A repeatedly pointing to a poster on the wall, which was for interpreter services, and handing staff a BSL interpreter’s card on two separate occasions.”



He continues: “In the course of my investigation I took independent advice from my equality and diversity adviser and a medical adviser. The equality adviser said that staff had not taken reasonable and appropriate steps to obtain a BSL interpreter for Ms A in line with their legal duty to do so under section 20 of the Equality Act 2010. She said that once they had been alerted to Ms A’s need for a BSL interpreter, a clear plan should have been drawn up to try to coordinate the availability of doctors and others communicating with Ms A and a BSL interpreter, sufficiently trained to be able to communicate complex medical issues.” ...READ MORE: http://www.scotsman.com/news/health/deaf-patient-denied-interpreter-by-dundee-hospital-1-2862772



Related Article:

The Limping Chicken - Deaf News: Deaf patient in Scottish hospital left without an interpreter for twelve days

Tanzania's First Deaf Mechanic

VIDEO: English Subtitles - Tanzania's First Deaf Mechanic.



In a Country where the Deaf are classified with animals & non living things, its almost near impossible for any Deaf person to make a headway in life. Johari, just like a few other Deaf is one of the first to show the communities in Tanzania & the World that " Deafness is not Inability & everyone deserves a fair chance in life" Deaf people can do anything except hear!





Related Post

Deaf People DO Have Interesting Jobs!

Deaf People Can Do Anything Apart From Hear!

SMU Ads Targeting Deaf Students

VIDEO [CC] - Discover how Ginny's SMU experience encouraged her to start up a social enterprise for the Deaf.



Ginny Ong Jing Yun is undergraduate in Bachelor of Science (Information Systems Management) and Started up a social enterprise for the Deaf. "I thought that nobody would understand what I was saying. Over the years, Singapore Management University (SMU) slowly gave me a lot of tips on how to participate effectively. I learnt how to be more outspoken, more confident of myself.





Two years ago I set up this social enterprise it's called iDeaf-Connect. My aim is to use this company to create Deaf awareness. Also, we wanted to have a business to provide jobs for the Deaf. We aim to use this place as a training hub.



I will go out and meet my clients. I will give talks and I will share with them how they can work with the Deaf better. The broad-based curriculum at SMU gave me a lot of knowledge. It helped me to understand better how companies run their business.



You have a lot of projects so you have to face a lot of deadlines. It motivates me to be quick, be creative, think out of the box to finish the project. So the same thing can apply to my company as well. To me, if not for the interactive style (of education) in SMU, I wouldn't be here talking to you today." Welcome to SMU. Discover a Different U at http://www.smu.edu.sg/admissions

Rabu, 27 Maret 2013

Sign Language Production Makes History

VIDEO: Deaf Theatre: Sign language production makes history.



SOUTH AFRICA - For the first time in history, a South African Deaf Theatre organisation is set to perform in Europe at the Clin d’Oeil Festival, which is a one-of-a-kind, multi-disciplinary event that aims to highlight the richness of the sign language community. And the chosen body is the Catalina Theatre for its breakthrough performance of Listen with Your Eyes.



The Tonight caught up with the director of the Catalina Theatre, Alison Swannick, to chat about this honour that’s been bestowed on South Africa.With an interpreter joining us, Swannick said she was elated that the play was chosen for the European fest.



“When I got the e-mail, I screamed. I never expected to get that invitation. On the other hand, I am a bit scared. At first it felt like it wasn’t even real. The first thought I had was, ‘where is the money going to come from?’, because the only difficulty was that we would have to pay half the airfare. And we’re looking for funders.



“But I was amazed that South Africa is going to be in the European Deaf Festival.



(If seen blank, refresh this)


It’s like our time has finally come. It’s more for the young actors who are involved in this, so I’m ecstatic for them.”



Last year, Swannick hosted the first Deaf theatre festival in South Africa, Talking Hands. Chatting about the response to that event, she says: “The festival was a success, but there was not enough audience support. It was the first time, so we learnt a lot. But it was a difficult experience and we had no sponsors.



“But in terms of the performances at the festival, they were very good. Everybody reported that they enjoyed it. There are no deaf filmmakers in South Africa, so many people enjoyed the international films that we showed at the film fest. But, now when I look at it, it was successful because one of our performances is going to France. It was a major breakthrough in Deaf performance art.”...READ MORE: http://www.iol.co.za/tonight/news/local/sign-language-production-makes-history-1.1488616#.UVK3pjfNmSo

Puppet Teaches Students Sign Language

VIDEO [CC] - Puppet teaches students sign language in the mainstream school.



TIPPECANOE COUNTY, Ind. - (WLFI) From their ABCs, to different types of animals, Friday, students at Wea Ridge Elementary School learned how to communicate with the Deaf through sign language.



Yet, students didn't learn from just anyone. They were taught by Mandy the Puppet. The play is put on by a group called "Kids First."



Program Coordinator Gail McCormick said the program began locally in 1994. "The goal of the program is to make the students realize that they can be accepting of children with special needs, of individuals with special needs," said McCormick.





McCormick said the play focuses on a girl named Mandy. Mandy is approached by a young girl who loses her kitten, and together, they find the lost kitten by using sign language.



Volunteer Beata Ribeiro said using puppets to illustrate the communication barrier allows kids to kick down their own barrier when it comes to asking questions. ...Read more: http://www.wlfi.com/dpp/news/local/puppet-teaches-students-sign-language

Deaf Girl, Gang Rape Victim Gives Birth

VIDEO: Minor Deaf girl, gang rape victim gives birth to child in India.



BANGALORE - Kalpana, (name changed), 15, Deaf and mute cannot convey her feelings through words to others. But her eyes reflect her trauma and agony.



A gang rape victim, Kalpana’s agony has compounded when she gave birth to a baby at a hospital in Allahabad.







She was gang raped last year at her village in Allahabad district allegedly by two youths of the same village. The culprits later convened a panchayat and forced her parents not to approach police but to settle the matter outside. The panchayat had held that the culprits should pay Rs 21,000 each to the family of the victim.



However, police got wind of the matter through the local media and registered a case and arrested the alleged culprits.



None bothered to think about the victim who became pregnant. Sources said the families of the culprits also tried to force an abortion but did not succeed.



The minor gave birth to a baby a few days back. The poor parents had to borrow money from a money lender to admit the girl to the hospital... Read more: deccanherald.com/minor-deaf-mute-gang-rape.html

Deaf Woman Suing Former Employer For No Terps

Deaf woman suing former employer for not providing sign language interpreter. Discrimination suit filed.



ROSEVILLE - A local nonprofit dedicated to helping people with special needs is being sued for allegedly discriminating against a former employee with disabilities.



The lawsuit says Placer ARC violated federal law when it failed to provide reasonable accommodations to a Deaf employee.



Homeyra Kazerounian is Deaf and uses sign language to communicate. And according to a lawsuit, her supervisors failed to provide an interpreter for her during daily staff meetings and forced her to speak only in English.



“Literally she doesn’t speak anything. She uses American Sign Language,” said David Offen-Brown, Kazerounian’s attorney.



Kazarounian started working at Placer ARC’s Auburn office in 2005 was always given an interpreter during mandatory staff meetings, according to the federal lawsuit. But when she transferred to Roseville three years later, her attorneys says that all changed.



“They required her to communicate by writing notes,” said Offen-Brown.



According to a lawsuit filed by an attorney for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Kazerounian’s consistent requests for an interpreter went unfulfilled.



“This didn’t allow her to participate in the meetings, to ask questions, to make statements, to participate in discussions,” said Offen-Brown.



Placer ARC Executive Director Barbara Guenther wouldn’t go on camera, but released this statement: ...Read more: http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2013/03/26/deaf-woman-suing-former-employer-for-not-providing-sign-language-interpreter/

Minggu, 24 Maret 2013

RIT National Science Fair For Deaf

VIDEO [CC] - Science fair held at RIT for Deaf and Hard of Hearing students.



ROCHESTER - It was all about finding the answers to scientific questions at the RIT National Science Fair for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students on Saturday.





Dozens of middle and high school students from Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida and a number of other states all came to Rochester for the fair. RIT is the home of the National Technical Institute for the Deaf.



The groups were tasked with putting together presentations related to topics like chemistry, engineering, zoology and medicine.



Judges then looked through the projects to determine a winner, who wins a cash prize. SOURCE

Structural Violence: Deaf Education Box

VIDEO [ASL] - Question: Why are our Deaf students across the nation underperforming in academics? We give them a wide array of 'communication options' - speech therapy, hearing-aids, cochlear implants, sim-com, cued speech, total communication, signed-exact-English/PSE interpreters, note-taking services - they don't need their American Sign Language with our "least restrictive environment."







Answer: "One cannot expect positive results from an educational or political action program which fails to respect the particular view of the world held by the people. Such a program constitutes cultural invasion, good intentions notwithstanding."

Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed.



Thought: We wanted to 'communicate' with our Deaf child in spoken English -- even if only slightly -- so we decided to forbid her use of sign language, even though it is the only natural, robust, and fully accessible language for a Deaf child.



Rebuttal: "Any situation in which some men prevent others from engaging in the process of inquiry is one of violence; ... to alienate humans from their own decision making is to change them into objects."

Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed.



Question: What can I do? I'm just a teacher.

Answer: "The educator has the duty of not being neutral."

Paulo Freire, We Make the Road by Walking: Conversations on Education and Social Change.



"Language For All" is a grassroots marketing campaign to help raise awareness and funds for the benefit of Texas School for the Deaf Foundation.



We, the people of Texas, are on the verge of failing a critical part of our community. State budget cuts are threatening access to language for Deaf children, and it is our shared responsibility to make sure they retain this fundamental right. Unite with the Texas School for the Deaf as we transform lives through our language and education services. Join us in our relentless crusade to fight for Language for All.



Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LanguageForAll

Twitter: https://twitter.com/_LanguageForAll

Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/languageforall

Yosemite Deaf Services: Driving in Yosemite

VIDEO [ASL/CC] - Driving around Yosemite is much different than driving around the rest of California. Here are some things to remember if you are planning to explore Yosemite by car.





Deaf Services in Yosemite National Park.

Watch this short video to learn about the Deaf services program in Yosemite.





More details, visit at http://www.nps.gov/yose/

Kamis, 21 Maret 2013

Woman Kills Her Two Deaf Children, Commits Suicide

VIDEO: A hearing woman kills her two Deaf children, commits suicide in India.



Unable to witness the plight of her two Deaf children, a 30-year-old woman allegedly killed them before committing suicide in Hamirpur district.



According to the sources, the woman was upset over the disabilities of the children. Husband of the woman works in Shimla while she was living with the minor children in Jharrajputan village of the district, police said.







Last night, she allegedly fed Sulphas tablets to the two children and later consumed it herself, police said. After consuming the poisonous tablet she called up her husband to inform about it, police said.



The youngest child, a girl, died on the spot while the woman and the son succumbed in a hospital later, police said.



"I am fed with my life and can not bear the stress anymore" these were the words wrote by Vandana Sharma before she hung herself to ceiling fan of her house. On Wednesday when neighbors discovered foul smell they got suspicious after which the door of the house was made to open.



Vandna Sharma's body was found hanging with ceiling fan while dead three kids were in bedroom. She killed them by smothering pillow. Two were girls and a son was two and half years old who was Deaf by birth. Her Husband is posted in Ratnagiri and stays there most of the time. Vandana Sharma could not bear the the stress and ended up her and three innocent kids lives. SOURCE

NY Man Brutal Stabbing of Deaf Teen Girlfriend

VIDEO: Harlem man arrested for brutal stabbing of Deaf teen girlfriend. Bismark Lithgow, 24, charged in death of 19-year-old Francis Pellerano. Police say Lithgow stuffed the victim’s body into a 55-gallon drum.



NEW YORK CITY - A Harlem man was arrested for stabbing his Deaf teenage girlfriend to death and stuffing her body into a 55-gallon drum, cops said Thursday.



Bismark Lithgow, 24, was charged with murder in the killing of Francis Angelica Alfonso Pellerano, 19 whose bloodied body was found in a container in Lithgow’s Seventh Ave. apartment on March 2, cops said.



Lithgow’s grandmother made the grisly find after she drove her bipolar grandson to St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital because he was acting strange, sources said.



The city’s medical examiner later determined Pellerano was stabbed to death.





Pellerano, who attended the Rhode Island School for the Deaf, had recently moved from her native Dominican Republic to live with Lithgow and his grandmother before she was killed, sources said.



Lithgow, who is also Deaf and worked as a janitor for the New York Sports Club on W. 145th St., was arrested after he was released from the hospital on Wednesday. ...Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/uptown/harlem-man-arrested-stabbing-deaf-teen-girlfriend-article-1.1295053



Related Post:

Deaf Woman's Body Found in Drum in NYC

Selasa, 19 Maret 2013

Wrong Medications Kill Pregnant Deaf Persons

Wrong medications kill pregnant Deaf persons – GNAD Director.



KUMASI - The Ghana National Association of the Deaf (GNAD) has observed that the inability of doctors and nurses to understand and interpret sign language was leading to wrong prescriptions of medicines to Deaf persons.



The GNAD said the phenomenon was leading to many expectant mothers among Deaf persons losing their lives while others were disheartened and disappointed, given the unfair treatment meted out to Deaf persons visiting health centres across the country.



Mr James M. Sambian, Executive Director of the GNAD, made this known in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Monday to explain the challenges death persons encounter when accessing healthcare.



He said lack of sign language interpreters was resulting in inappropriate diagnosis because of communication barrier among Deaf patients and the hearing medical officers and the nurses.



Mr Sambian explained that the situation had resulted in the incidence of incorrect prescriptions consequently leading to preventable deaths.



The Executive Director noted that due to lack of understanding and interpretation of sign language, a medical officer in one of the health centres in the Ashanti Region sometime ago, prescribed wrong medicine to a pregnant Deaf woman which consequently killed her.



To break the communication barrier and getting an intermediary, many Deaf persons in most cases had to bear the entire cost of engaging a private sign language interpreter in order to access quality health. ...Read more: http://vibeghana.com/2013/03/18/wrong-medications-kill-pregnant-deaf-persons-gnad-director

Deaf Woman Hears Son's Voice For First Time

VIDEO: The incredible footage, shows the profoundly Deaf woman, Amy tries out her new cochlear implant an electronic device surgically implanted in the ear to provide a sense of sound.



A 26-year-old mother, who was born Deaf, was able to hear her son’s voice for the first time with a cochlear implant. Amy was sitting in her doctor’s office with her family as she tried out the implant, an electronic device surgically implanted in the ear.



She started crying instantly after hearing her six-year-old son Blake speak to her for the first time. “Hi mom,” Blake said, as the room erupted with laughter. Amy nodded to indicate she heard what he said. “I feel weird,” she said. “It feels so different.”



Though she was completely Deaf, she still received her high school diploma and college degree. She escaped from her silent life with the implant, something she had always dreamed of doing but never thought was possible.





“This is just a start to the road ahead to learn what sound is and where it comes from. It was the most amazing day ever to be a witness to this medical miracle and a true gift from God,” Amy’s aunt Catherine Arnold said.



Though the sound provided by the implant isn’t the same as natural hearing, it allows patients to hear and understand speech and environmental sounds like music. ... Read more http://www.opposingviews.com/i/society/video-deaf-woman-hears-sons-voice-first-time



Related Cochlear Implant Parodies/Spoofs:

Cochlear Implant Users Spoof

The Language in Space of the Cochlea Implantation Parody

Deaf Man Hears For The First Time Parody

Cochlear Implant User Struck By Lightning



Related Hears For The First Time:

HEARS For The First Time Video Is FAKE ?

Deaf For 29 Years & Hearing Herself For The First Time!

Little Deaf Girl HEARS For The First Time

Deaf Toddler Hears Parents' Voices For First Time

Deaf Woman Hears Son's Voice For First Time

Adopted Chinese Deaf Girl Hears For The First Time

Deaf People Hears For The First Time Compilation

Senin, 18 Maret 2013

The Importance of BSL Act For Deaf Education

VIDEO: The Importance of BSL Act For Deaf Education.



BSL translation of paragraph-by-clip of the Innocents of Oppression blog post to mark the 10th anniversary of the "official" recognition of British Sign Language today (18th March 2013).







No subtitles, but the full text is on the blog. http://www.innocentsofoppression.com



The recognition of British Sign Language: 10th Anniversary Celebration: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/education/newsandevents/events?id=18213



Legal recognition of sign languages: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_recognition_of_sign_languages

Minggu, 17 Maret 2013

First Deaf Woman Crowns 'Miss Smiling Irish Eyes'

VIDEO: Allegheny County Crowns First Deaf “Miss Smiling Irish Eyes” The first Deaf woman to receive the honor in its 50-year history.



PITTSBURGH - It takes poise and dedication to earn the title of “Miss Smiling Irish Eyes.” Pittsburgh’s 50-year tradition continued Friday with the crowning of a girl who truly earned the honor. Irish eyes might be forgiven if they grow a little misty. When 17-year-old Maggie Donaldson is crowned “Miss Smiling Irish Eyes,” she’ll make history.



“At first I couldn’t believe it was really me,” she said. Maggie is the 50th to girl hold the title. But a more important number than that, she is the first one who was born Deaf. The girl from West Deer has earned the title.





“In order to win you have to be involved in the Irish community. You have to be of Irish descent,” Maggie says. “And then, you have to have good grades, you have to be very involved in everything and then you get picked.”



Maggie’s mother will never forget what she was told soon after her daughter was born. “She’ll never speak. You just heard her, she speaks wonderfully. She’ll never do well in school. She’ll have difficulty learning. And she hasn’t had any of those problems,” said Lilli Donaldson, Maggie’s mom.



“You know, I thought in the beginning there has to be and exception to the rule. And she’s it.”



Maggie is valedictorian of Deer Lakes High School, which she attends in the morning. She’s also a leader at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf, where she spends each afternoon. ...Read more: http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2013/03/15/allegheny-county-crowns-first-deaf-miss-smiling-irish-eyes/

Deaf Man Strikes Wife’s Lover With Axe

Deaf man strikes wife’s lover with axe in Africa.





CHINHOYI - A 63-year-old Deaf man from the Mamina communal area in Mhondoro, Christmas Makomeke, has been sentenced to three years in prison for striking a fellow villager with an axe accusing him of having an affair with his wife.



Makomeke was sentenced on his own plea of guilty to attempted murder when he appeared before Chinhoyi regional magistrate Never Katiyo last week.



The court heard that the complainant Cylus Bhunu (58) sustained serious shoulder, chest and head injuries in the attack which occurred on December 5 last year.



However, Makomeke had his jail sentence wholly suspended for five years on condition of good behaviour and that he pays $500 fine before March 29.



In passing sentence, the court considered Makomeke’s advanced age as a mitigatory factor and that he was Deaf and had been extremely provoked by the complainant who was, according to overwhelming evidence adduced in court, having an affair with the former’s wife.



The court heard that on December 5 last year at around 6am, Makomeke met Bhunu just outside the latter’s cattle pen.



Makomeke, who was armed with a hoe and an axe, accused Bhunu of having an affair with his wife. ...Read more: http://www.newsday.co.zw/2013/03/18/deaf-man-63-strikes-wifes-lover-with-axe/

Annoying Deaf Brother Parody

VIDEO - Tickled Mink Comedy: Presents a parody short film - 'Annoying Deaf Brother'



When a Deaf kid listens to the T.V. too loud, his brother gets annoyed.



Starring: Brennan Bruner & Danny Scharar

Director/Editor: Bradley Calder

Tickled Mink Comedy







More comedy videos, subscribe TickledMinkComedy

Deaf Awareness: Definition of Cyberbullying

VIDEO [ASL] - This vlog covers of clarifies on the definition of cyberbullying.



Manuals to educate the public, teachers and parents summarize, "Cyberbullying is being cruel to others by sending or posting harmful material using a cell phone or the internet." Research, legislation and education in the field are ongoing. Basic definitions and guidelines to help recognize and cope with what is regarded as abuse of electronic communications have been identified.





Cyberbullying vs. Cyberstalking - The practice of cyberbullying is not limited to children and, while the behavior is identified by the same definition when practiced by adults, the distinction in age groups sometimes refers to the abuse as cyberstalking or cyberharassment when perpetrated by adults toward adults.



Common tactics used by cyberstalkers are performed in public forums, social media or online information sites and are intended to threaten a victim's earnings, employment, reputation, or safety. Behaviors may include encouraging others to harass the victim and trying to affect a victim's online participation.



Many cyberstalkers try to damage the reputation of their victim and turn other people against them. Find more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberbullying

Sabtu, 16 Maret 2013

Drive Thru Invisible Driver Prank Video

VIRAL VIDEO [CC] - Drive thur invisible prank is a MUST-SEE!



A magician-turned-prankster on YouTube has once again baffled drive-through employees, this time by dressing up in a seat costume.



Magic of Rahat posted a video this week that shows the trickster driving through fast-food restaurants with the seat costume on and terrifying workers when it looks like the car has driven itself.



Rahat seems to live for tormenting drive-through employees. He's pulled several pranks on unsuspecting fast food victims, including one in which he pretends his money catches fire while trying to pay.





In another, he creates a shock while the the employee returns his change and then he dramatically pretends to faint at the wheel. In one of the most obvious pranks, he puts a fake hand up his sleeve, so the employee takes his hand off with the money.







This might be the best one yet. The video is presented by Penguin Magic and it's been viewed more than 3 million times. SOURCE

Miss Deaf International Fitness Competition

VIDEO: Miss Deaf International Pageant: Miss Deaf International Fitness Competition.



Watch the different Misses Deaf International compete in the Fitness Portion of the Miss Deaf International Pageant held in Ankara, Turkey.





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Selasa, 12 Maret 2013

Deaf-Blind Diver Defies The Toughest Odds

Deaf-Blind Heather diver defies the toughest odds.



Heather Lawson dived off Ricketts Point with VicDeaf volunteer Bill Hynes and aide Marie Hunter. Picture: Chris HopkinsHeather Lawson is possibly the first Deaf-Blind person in Australia to go scuba diving, and one of only a few in the world to have done so.



The 54-year-old Frankston adventurer, who was born Deaf and gradually lost her sight (as have two of her siblings), has skydived and bungee-jumped, climbed rocks and the Sydney Harbour Bridge, flown in a hot air balloon and skied over snow and water.



Scuba diving has long been on her bucket list. Last week she spent an hour in the shallow waters of Ricketts Point Marine Sanctuary, thanks to a support team of seven including her Auslan tactile interpreters and local dive instructor Mike Letch, founder of the Disabled Divers Association.



Ms Lawson was tethered to a scuba hose, her tank floating separately so she could explore and sign freely. She held starfish, kelp and sea urchins as interpreter Bill Hynes also Deaf, and a qualified diver described everything to her in water up to three metres deep and 200 metres offshore.



Mr Letch said later that Ms Lawson's perception of her surroundings was incredible to witness.



"She was so much more in tune with a whole lot of stuff going on than the rest of us," he said. "She's super switched on, super intelligent. We want her to become a regular next year, now that we know how it can be done."



Back on shore, Ms Lawson - her grin as wide as the harbour bridge she climbed - declared the experience "amazing". "I wish I was a seal, then I could stay in the water all day," she said. "I was pretty nervous before going in, but it was incredible. I was so determined to breathe properly and ignore the waves. ...Read more: http://www.baysidereviewlocal.com.au/story/1351254/blind-deaf-diver-defies-the-toughest-odds/?cs=1473



Gallery: Deaf-blind Heather scuba-diving:

- Click here for our picture gallery of Heather's big dive

Deaf Entertainer Teaches Students With Comedy Act

VIDEO [ASL/CC] - Deaf entertainer teaches students with comedy act. Internationally renowned entertainer performs for Temecula ASL students.



Decades ago, CJ Jones walked into a St. Louis, Mo., public school and was told he was not allowed to sign. The Temecula Valley High School students that the Deaf entertainer performed for Tuesday live in an entirely new and accepting world.



“It’s amazing to see the change,” Jones said through an interpreter. “It makes it a lot easier for Deaf kids to feel like, ‘Oh, I’m not alone. I’m not strange. I’m not different because I’m Deaf and everybody’s hearing.’







“If they see hearing people sign, they feel confident and empowered.”



For more than 30 years, Jones has been spreading that word through one-man shows like the one he delivered Tuesday for more than 200 American Sign Language students in Temecula Valley’s newly minted performing arts center.



Afterward, the school’s ASL club participated in a workshop a series of non-verbal acting, gesturing and miming exercises aimed at giving many of the students their first real opportunity to learn the nuances of sign language from a Deaf person who’s learned to live in a hearing world.



“He’s inspirational for anybody whether you know sign language or not,” ASL teacher Darcy Calas said. “A lot of these kids have never had exposure to a Deaf person. To see him here and interacting with hearing people, to see how he’s able to communicate with the hearing world, it’s something that we just can’t teach in a classroom. You can’t learn that from a book.” ...READ MORE: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/mar/12/education-jones-asl-deaf-students/



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Related Post:

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Inspirational Deaf People All Over The World

VIDEO [ASL/CC] - Frontrunners 8 have made a couple of videos about inspirational Deaf people all over the world. We hope you will enjoy this special series of ours!





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Deaf President Now: A News Footage Perspective

VIDEO [ASL/CC] - WASHINGTON - On August 24, 1987, Gallaudet's 6th president, Dr. Jerry Lee, announced that he would be leaving the presidency of Gallaudet University.







It prompted new (or rekindled) discussion among the Deaf community that it is time for Gallaudet to have a Deaf president leading the one and only Deaf university in the world. The search committee narrowed down from 67 applicants to 3 finalists: Dr. Harvey Corson (Deaf), Dr. Elizabeth Zinser (hearing), and Dr. I. King Jordan (Deaf).



On March 6, 1988, it was expected that the board would announce the new 7th president in the field house at 8:30 pm. Instead of making a formal announcement, the audience was told that "a news release had been hastily distributed two hours earlier" revealing that Dr. Elizabeth Zinser has been selected as first 7th president of Gallaudet University.



The reaction to the news was "met with shock, anger, disbelief, and, in some cases, tears" because every effort were made to the Gallaudet Board of Trustees with strong urgency that it is time for Gallaudet to have a Deaf president to lead the university. Upon the selection of Dr. Zinser, the birth of the now well-known Deaf President Now (DPN) protest officially began.



Visit www.JoeyBaer.com for more informations.

Deaf Woman's Body Found in Drum in NYC

VIDEO: Providence woman's body found in drum in New York City.



NEW YORK CITY - A young woman from Providence was the victim of a gruesome murder in New York City.



The body of 19-year-old Francis Alfonso Pellerano was found in a 55-gallon drum inside a Harlem apartment over the weekend.



"I always knew that something was going to happen to her. I wasn't sleeping at night," the victim's father, Manuel Alfonso, told NBC 10 News through a translator.





Pellerano was Deaf and could not speak. She was a student at the Rhode Island School for the Deaf on and off for about five years, until she left the school late last year.



Family members said she went to New York with a young man she met on Facebook. He is also Deaf.



Media outlets in New York reported that Pellerano may have been planning to leave the boyfriend. Pellerano's body was found in the barrel by the boyfriend's grandmother, who smelled a foul odor.



There have been no arrests. The boyfriend is under psychiatric care in a New York hospital.



"I want justice because I know he's not crazy. He cleaned all the blood after he killed her," Alfonso said.



The Rhode Island School for the Deaf is planning a memorial for Pellerano. SOURCE

Deaf Man Robbed & Pushed From 3 Floors of Hotel

Man says Deaf son pushed from 3rd floor of hotel in Mexico. Victim suffered a broken hip, skull fracture and crushed ankle.



The father of a Deaf man from Kamloops, B.C., says his son was robbed and pushed over a third-storey railing while staying at a resort hotel in Mexico.



Ron Simpson says his son Kevin suffered a broken hip, skull fracture and crushed ankle in the attack in Cabo San Lucas last weekend.



He says Kevin was robbed of $850 and pushed off a third floor level of the hotel to the concrete below.



He calls the attack a case of attempted murder.



Simpson says his son is in hospital in San Jose, Mexico, and is in good spirits, but he needs to be brought home to get more medical attention.



The Canadian foreign affairs department says it is gathering more information and has officials standing by to provide consular assistance as needed. SOURCE

Deaf People With Mental Illness Need Treatment

VIDEO: Deaf people with mental illness need culturally sensitive treatment: Medical research.



Medical practitioners need to provide culturally sensitive treatment to members of the Deaf community with psychiatric disorders to ensure they are diagnosed correctly and receive appropriate treatment, says Wolters Kluwer Health.



The report was published in the March Journal of Psychiatric Practice. The authors reviewed the limited research literature available about the mental health care of Deaf patients who communicate via American Sign Language (ASL) or gestures.



Communication strategies: Communication is challenging for Deaf people who communicate in sign language or in gestures.



"Deaf individuals comprise a cultural and linguistic minority group within the United States, and culturally and linguistically appropriate psychiatric treatment must reflect these differences," according to Sarah A. Landsberger, PhD, and coauthors of the Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.







There are approximately 1.2 Americans with profound hearing loss. Some Deaf people are unable to hear most sounds, even with assistive listening devices such as hearing aids. Some Deaf people identify themselves as part of the Deaf community, with a unique language sign and culture.



Sign language is complex and complete with its own syntax, grammar and vocabulary. These Deaf people do not think of their hearing loss as a disability. ...Read more: http://www.examiner.com/article/deaf-people-with-mental-illness-need-culturally-sensitive-treatment

Rescued 70 Deaf Chinese From Human Trafficking

Exclusive: 360 arrested for enticing Deaf to commit crime in China.





BEIJING - Chinese police have arrested 360 suspects for their involvement in enticing Deaf-Mute to engage in robbery or burglary, the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) said on Tuesday.



Police in 21 provincial regions have uprooted 61 such criminal gangs and rescued 70 Deaf people during a recent joint campaign, according to a statement released by the MPS.



The suspects deceived the students from Deaf schools via social networks on the pretext of offering job opportunities or going traveling, when in fact the purpose of the approach was to force them to commit crimes such as robbery or burglary, the statement said.



Yang Erdu, a most-wanted suspect, together with other prime suspects, was captured by police during the campaign, according to the statement.



China issued an action plan for fighting human trafficking (2013-2020) last week, urging greater measures to crack down on abduction-related crimes and appropriately relocate the victims of human trafficking. SOURCE

Facebook Opens Worlds For The Deaf

VIDEO [CC] - One billion people use Facebook around the world. Its reach is undisputed and unparalleled, but its impact on one specific community has opened up doors to a new world for the Deaf.



Christina Teani, 34, of South San Francisco is a teacher for special needs students. She understands putting in that extra bit of effort because she was born with what she calls “an invisible disability” unable to hear without wearing a hearing aid.





“You can often feel like that sometimes you are not good enough, you don’t feel like you’re part of a group,” Teani explained. “Human relationships are all about intimacy, getting to know people, feeling like you belong in a group and if you’re not able to connect, you emotionally feel left out.”



But her life has changed, much like it has for her Deaf friend, Sarah McBride of Palo Alto.



“With Facebook, I’m able to communicate with my friends through chat,” she said.



These women say the social media site has opened up a whole new world to them, offering up not only quick chats with friends, but the ability to share memories through pictures and videos especially satisfying for them because it’s one of the first times they’ve been able to communicate the same way the hearing community does.



So when the opportunity came up to visit the company that made it happen, they didn’t hesitate. Together with friends, they took tour of Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park to celebrate the changes they’ve experienced in their lives.



“That’s what I like about Facebook," Teani said. "We’re all on the same playing field we haven’t had before.” ...Read more: http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Facebook-IOpens-New-World-For-Deaf-186194282.html

Senin, 11 Maret 2013

Deaf Schools Are Closing, If Only It Were Just TV

Deaf Awareness: If only it were just TV, Schools for the Deaf are closing.





On Monday, March 4th, the television show ‘Switched at Birth’ did something on mainstream TV that had never been done before. It ran an episode in sign language. Some viewers thought at first that the sound on their television was broken.



The show is an ABC Family drama that revolves around two teenagers who were switched at birth, one of whom is Deaf.



According to ABC Family, it is the first television series to have multiple Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing series regulars, and scenes shot entirely in American Sign Language.



Marlee Matlin guest stars. Because of this, the series not only exposes the American public to the Deaf community, it also has the power to educate us about important related issues: last week’s ASL episode focused on the failure of the American education system to serve many Deaf students who find themselves there because their own schools have closed.



The main story of ‘Switched at Birth's’ ASL episode focuses on the closing of such a school, and the protest created by the students to keep it open. Many students who are Deaf want to study in a school designed for them, where they can communicate directly with teachers and counselors, interact directly with their peers and participate fully in extracurricular activities – things most hearing students take for granted. ...Read more: http://www.thejewishweek.com/blogs/new-normal/if-only-it-were-just-tv-schools-deaf-are-closing



‘Switched at Birth's’ ASL episode information: http://www.tvrage.com/Switched_at_Birth



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Kamis, 07 Maret 2013

Anti-Bullying At Florida School For The Deaf

VIDEO [CC] - Florida School for the Deaf and Blind takes anti-bullying stand.



ST. JOHNS COUNTY, FL - Since the implementation of the Jeffrey Johnston "Stand up for All Students" Act, which was passed in 2008, all schools in the state are required to have anti-bullying policies in place.



The Florida School for the Deaf and Blind in St. Augustine is just one district working to eliminate bullying. Students from elementary through high school are learning about the importance of being respectful, responsible and cooperative.





"She was teasing me like 'I didn't know the words, I didn't know the English language," said student Julia Kadzis.



"In my last school, I had no friends. No one would talk to me really," explains freshman Gracie Delong.



"I've had lots of experiences with bullying here and in the world, and I've tolerated it," said senior D.J. Snell.



Students at FSDB recall their own personal experiences with bullying. "They kept bullying me because I'm a Deaf person," Snell said.



"No one would talk to me really, no one would sit next to me at the lunch table," said Delong. "And the same group of girls would bully me because they didn't think I could see certain things." ...Read more: http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/local/article/FSDB-takes-anti-bullying-stand

Adopted Chinese Deaf Girl Hears For The First Time

VIDEO: Heartwarming moment Deaf girl hears mom's voice for the first time. Moment Deaf girl, 5, who was abandoned in Chinese town square hears for the first time after she was adopted by American couple.



Dailymail.co.uk - A Tulsa family is celebrating after the Deaf little girl they adopted from China was able to hear for the first time - a moment they described as 'breathtaking'. Gifted a cochlear implant, Jayde Scholl now squeals and laughs with delight as she listens to the sound of her adoptive mother Jaque Scholl's voice.



On Tuesday the implant was switched on, marking the end of a two adoption process for Jayde after she spent the first four-years of her life in a Chinese orphanage after being abandoned in a town square at the age of eight-months.





Luckily for Jayde, the Scholl's were looking to adopt and saw her on trip to China two-years-ago, but international adoptions take longer than domestic ones.



Once the paper-work was complete, the Scholl's brought Jayde to the United States just before Christmas.



However, Jaque, who is a doctor of audiology at her own School Center for the Deaf in Oklahoma, noticed something was wrong with her new daughter on the plane home.



She realized that Jayde wasn't paying attention or watching the in-flight video, even when the volume on the headphones was switched up to full. ...READ MORE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2289388/Moment-deaf-girl-5-abandoned-Chinese-town-square-hears-time-adopted-American-couple.html



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Deaf Man Hears For The First Time Parody

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Gallaudet 'Deaf President Now' Movement

VIDEO: The Kojo Nnamdi Show: The Legacy Of Gallaudet's 'Deaf President Now' Movement, 03/07/13 (Full Hour)



Since its founding in the mid-19th century, Gallaudet University has been an academic and cultural hub for the Deaf community. But until 1988, the university never had a Deaf president.



Twenty-five years ago this week, students launched a protest on the Northeast D.C. campus, dubbed the "Deaf President Now" movement. The protest resulted in the school's first Deaf president, and helped spur passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act two years later. Kojo explores the legacy of student protests at Gallaudet.







Guests - Gregory Hlibok: Former Gallaudet University Student Body President and student leader of the Deaf President Now movement in 1988; Chief of the Disability Rights Division in the Bureau of Consumer and Governmental Affairs at the Federal Communications Commission



T. Alan Hurwitz: President, Gallaudet University



Fred Weiner: Interim Assistant Vice President, Gallaudet University; Member, Gallaudet University Class of 1983



Sen. Tom Harkin: D-Iowa; Sponsor of the Americans with Disabilities Act (1990)



Find more information about the show: http://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2013-03-07/legacy-gallaudets-deaf-president-now-movement



Visit http://thekojonnamdishow.org for more details.