Deaf Community Experience Paper

Decent Essays
This was the second event in which I attended. I went with my friend Blanca who I had asked if she wanted to attend to learn more about the Deaf community and she gratefully said yes. We arrived at the event a little before five, so we decided to order our food and around the same time our food was done people began to show up. We were all seated near the back of the restaurant near the bathrooms in two long rows.
I decided to sit near blanca to help her out incase she needed to say something and was unsure or if she just wanted to learn something. During the night I was able to teach her a few things, such as, color, how to introduce herself, and how to say where she went to school. Although, during the night I was helping Blanca we talked

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Deaf Like Me Book Report

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Deaf Like Me In the book “Deaf Like Me,” by Thomas S. Spardley and James P Spardley, a father and uncle a go on a journey to share the struggle of teaching their deaf daughter/ niece how to communicate. Thomas and Louise live in Minnesota with their son Bruce. Thomas is a teacher at Carleton College, and Louise is a stay at home mom. Louise, the mother, finds out that while she is pregnant she developed German measles.…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Introduction to American Deaf Culture by Thomas Holcomb begins with a graphic celebrating Deaf culture to set the tone for the whole book. Holcomb discusses the difference between being deaf and the Deaf community, and the difference between community and culture. He uses specific examples to show how Deaf culture adheres to all five hallmarks that make up a culture. In the third chapter, he defines many of the terms and labels used to describe deaf people, including hearing-impaired and hard of hearing. Within this section, a helpful guide of appropriate terms and inappropriate terms is provided so hearing people understand what is acceptable when describing a deaf person.…

    • 1599 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    For the study of idoloculture and the group, I had decided to use the group that I am apart of, Executive Board for Deaf Redbirds Association. The Executive Board contains nine members: Megan who is a white female who is twenty years old and apart of middle class status. Kate is a white female who is twenty-one years old and comes from middle class status. Sammie, she is a white female who is twenty-one and comes from upper middle class status.…

    • 1312 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In Introduction To American Deaf Culture, Thomas K. Holcomb provides an insightful view of the Deaf culture and paints an inclusive picture of how the Deaf community functions and thrives in the world. In each chapter, proficient evidence is supplied to draw the audience (myself in this experience) in to the topics and make them think more thoughtfully about how the Deaf culture should be viewed. From the start, the audience is brought into this book on a personal level with an introduction from the author. In this intro, the major points of this book are previewed to prepare the audience for what is coming. The second chapter defines culture and gives examples of how the Deaf culture fits in with the others.…

    • 1312 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    There’s a lot of literature about adoption of Deaf babies into Hearing families. One of the most vital things that most of the literature agrees upon is having the parents of the Deaf child be fluent in ASL. Barbara White writes in “This Child is Mine: Deaf Parents and their Adopted Deaf Children” about Children of Deaf Adults (CODAs) and their experience being raised with Deaf parents; while Deaf children in Hearing families who don’t know ASL are often ignored or cast to the side, CODAs—through ASL—are always fully immersed into conversation. Barbara White talks about this experience of being ignored as a Deaf child by her hearing family: “I grew up in an all hearing family and my frequent complaint, which is all too common by Deaf folks in hearing families, was that I was either ignored to…

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The book our class was given to read is called “Train Go Sorry: Inside a Deaf World” by Leah Hager Cohen. The writing is about what she had seen living in a Deaf school since a child, and what struggles the Deaf community has. She lived in Lexington School for the Deaf, which she always felt at home, comfortable, and knew the lay of the land. She considered Lexington to be her “red-bricked castle, her seven acre kingdom.” This is where she lived with her brother Max, and her mother and father.…

    • 1549 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Jane Fernandes has an interesting and dynamic history in the Deaf community. In Worcester, Massachusetts, she was born Deaf to a Deaf mother and hearing father. She did not immediately start to learn American Sign Language – her mother taught her how to speak, and she became a very proficient lip-reader. It wasn’t until she entered graduate school at the University of Iowa that she began to learn how to sign. Fernandes has overcome a lot of adversity in her professional life.…

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    #HearingPrivilege There is a hashtag going around social media raising awareness for deaf people. People don’t think about deaf people when they go to a movie or a concert, they don’t think about how they can’t enjoy the simple things in life. There are many privileges that hearing people don’t realize they have because the public isn’t educated about deaf or hard of hearing people. Hearing privilege is when a deaf person has to wait months for a movie to have screencaps when everyone else got to watch the movie when it came out.…

    • 297 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Famous Deaf People Essay: Andrew Foster Andrew Foster was an incredibly inspiring, celebrated leader. Foster was the first African American to receive a bachelor’s degree from Gallaudet College as well as a master’s degree from Eastern Michigan University. After his studies, Foster worked as a missionary to the deaf in Africa for over 30 years until his death in 1987. During this time he founded the Christian Mission for Deaf Africans and established 32 schools for the Deaf in 13 different African countries. Andrew Foster was born on June 27th, 1925 in Ensley, Alabama.…

    • 461 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the book, The Deaf Community in America: History in the making by Meliva M. Nomeland and Ronald E. Nomeland, discusses the drastic changes in past years for the deaf community. Chapter three talks about Edward Miner Gallaudet and Alexander Graham Bell. They are two extremely different men born ten years apart and expressing very opposite views on the deaf community. Gallaudet and Bell were actively involved in the Washington area as well as sharing the same friend group. When the topic of deaf education would come up, the two men would have heated arguments about how it should be taught.…

    • 527 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Deaf President Now Movement Gallaudet University was named after Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, a gentlemen who became interested in deaf education in 1814, after a young child made a very significant impact on his life because the child was not getting the proper education. Gallaudet traveled to Paris in search for someone to help him find teaching methods for deaf children. Gallaudet met and convinced a French man, Laurent Clerc to come back to the United States with him. Gallaudet received information on sign language, and how to educate students who are deaf. Gallaudet and Clerc founded an American School for the Deaf in 1817, in Hartford, Connecticut, which became the nations first school for death children.…

    • 1334 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The article “Teaching Students with Hearing Losses” by Alice-Ann Darrow states that there are students with hearing loss that enjoy music and even learning about it. This article indicates different types of methods that should be used, it also includes different ways of music participation. The author explains how many people suffer from hearing loss. Darrow introduces different types of researchers that have to do with strategies for music training. There are plenty of difficulties that come with teaching students with disabilities and hearing loss, many teachers in the music department often do not know how to include the students.…

    • 903 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Personal Statement I chose to pursue a Deaf Studies degree because I am very passionate about advocating for the Deaf community. Initially, I was a Communication Studies major. However, upon taking ASL classes and other Deaf culture classes I developed great admiration for the culture. My plan is to work in higher education and be the dean of a college. This is important because the more power one has the more they can do to benefit a larger population.…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Watching the documentary Through Deaf Eyes was extremely informative. I was able to experience a side of deaf culture that I did not really know existed. It was incredible to see how far the deaf culture has come and learn where it came from. The documentary showed me just how cruel society could be when you are not seen as “normal”. The deaf community just wanted to be understood and treated with respect.…

    • 695 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Deaf event that I attended was a silent dinner held at Starbucks coffee. Before I arrived to the silent dinner, I was not sure what to expect or how much of the conversation I would be able to keep up with. When I was at the silent dinner, I was greeted kindly by those around me, and had the chance to meet many other signers that were a mix of both fellow Liberty students, and other people from the local community. The silent dinner that I attended was different than every other dinner event that I have attended, from the introduction that we made to the conversations and small talk that we shared.…

    • 554 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays