Failure Of Deaf Education

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In the Failure of Deaf Education, today’s society, there are still issues with deaf children in education, with ASL being one of those issues. “Today, more than a century after the congress Milan, the suppression of the language of the world’s deaf communities continues unabated and in the crucial realm of education, that suppression is growing worse” (Lane, pg. 129). The goal was to teach deaf children by educating them with methods developed for hearing children, which proved that deaf children were failing continuously. Written or spoken English is part of English communication meanwhile deaf children’s preference is to use ASL because it’s the first language that they learn. Deaf children do not succeed in lip-reading very well and have …show more content…

If deaf people do not have enough education, how are they capable of facing challenges in the future? How will they able to understand hearing people or how will hearing people understand us? Will they get a job since they don’t have the proper education? After trying to provide education, deaf children programs proved that they are failing to teach them English. This led them change into instructing their deaf students in manual trades, which gives a deaf child a chance to have a better …show more content…

The parents have to use hand gesture to teach their deaf child to be able to communicate with them. They were able to get help from some expert to be able to cooperate with their deaf child. The parents was able to be exposed to how to deal with deaf children’s needs with the help of an expect. They learn how to get the support that they need, having access in school, and most important of all, they learn that getting access for their deaf child is critical for the development of their child. As a deaf child goes through the phase of total communication, he or she is able to communicate with people. Some didn’t have identity because of his or her linguistic and social barriers. As a deaf child grows older, they may not be open-minded based on society’s view on them: deaf in the

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