"As long as we have Deaf people on Earth, we will have signs...
our beautiful Sign Language is the noblest gift God has given to
Deaf people."
-George W. Veditz
Inclusive Education
Position Statement on Inclusive Education
Deaf children have the right to an education.
Inclusive Education for the deaf means the education of students with various hearing levels in a way that addresses the students' individual differences and needs. An inclusive education program for Deaf students must be customized to address each individual student's unique needs.
Ideally, this process involves:
- the individually planned and systematically monitored arrangements of teaching procedures
- adapted equipment and materials
- teachers of the Deaf
- ASL/English interpreters
- accessible settings
- other interventions designed to help students of various hearing levels achieve a higher level of personal self-sufficiency and success in school and community that would be available if the student were given access to a typical classroom education
Statement
Due to closures of schools for the deaf throughout the world and in particular the Newfoundland School for the Deaf, the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of the Deaf (NLAD) has no choice but to accept Inclusive Education for students who are deaf.
NLAD recognizes that while Inclusive Education in public schools may be acceptable and suitable for many students who are deaf, it may not be for all students. Generally, the Deaf child in a regular school is isolated due to the language/communication difference. Inclusive Education must allow each student to feel respected, confident, and safe so he/she can learn and develop to his/her full potential. It is based on a system of values and beliefs centered on the best interests of the students. It must promote social cohesion, belonging, and active participation in learning, a complete school experience and positive interactions with peers and others in the school community.
Placement
- The regular classroom must accommodate the individual needs of Deaf students and teaching methodologies.
- Specialized services may be provided inside or outside the regular classroom, depending on the service or the particular course of study. Deaf students may need to leave the regular classroom to attend small, or one on one more intensive instructional teaching in a resource room.
- Individualized programs (ISSP)
- Deaf students with complex severe needs may require access to specialized classrooms where appropriate supports are in place.
The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador needs to ensure additional professional supports and services are available to students who are deaf in the Newfoundland and Labrador Inclusive Education system. Thee supports and services include but are not limited to:
- Teachers of the Deaf
- ASL/English Interpreters
- Tutors
- Note takers
- Itinerant teachers
- Guidance counselors who understand ASL and Deaf culture
- ASL Development Specialists/Evaluators
- Deaf role models
- Professional and paraprofessional services available to pre-schoolers
- Teaching of ASL to Deaf babies and Deaf pre-schoolers
- Assistive technology professionals
- A committee to regularly oversee and evaluate the individual Deaf students in Inclusive Education placements
American Sign Language, or ASL, is a complex form of manual communication in which hands, limbs, head, facial expression and body language are used to communicate a visual-spatial language without sound. ASL is not related to spoken English, and features an entirely different grammar and vocabulary; linguistically, it is a complete, natural, and fully realized language in its own right.
Acquisition of the spoken language is probably the major education challenge for deaf children. The ability to speak, read and write the language of the majority society greatly facilitates the life of the deaf person, but learning to speak is not a simple task as many factors influence this acquisition. For example, residual hearing, family involvement, and learning ability.
Effective communication in American Sign Language (ASL) demands consistent visual attention to the signer unlike spoken communication where visual attention to the speaker is not required.
Early social interactions in which the deaf child can learn ASL and the appropriate linguistic behavior as well as facilitate cognitive development are crucial.
Studies on ASL and on the development of language in deaf children provides evidence that deaf children exposed to a signed language acquire it in the mind the same way as hearing children learn a language spoken in their environment. Deaf children process information in signs and do not translate the signs into corresponding English words.
It is imperative for Deaf children to be exposed to ASL early in life for language acquisition. The acquisition of a natural sign language supports the acquisition of a spoken language.
Successful education of deaf children is dependent on the use of ASL as the language of instruction. Deaf children cannot achieve complete mastery and native fluency in a language to which they have but limited and conditional access. The significance of language for human life is indisputable. Many children born deaf are not given the opportunity to discover unconditionally the world of language early in life. It impacts not only the linguistic environment but also the child's psychological, social and emotional development.
Early exposure to a signed language has permanent linguistic benefits. Sign Language competency is positively related to spoken language literacy. It is clear that deaf children need to be educated in Sign Language. Deaf children educated bilingually often achieve high reading and writing skills.
Language is connected to our identity, self-awareness and inner being. Language connects people. Individuals using the same language often feel a special bond. The language tie tends to be stronger than other human characteristics. Our linguistic development is linked to our cognitive, social and personality development as well as to our self-esteem and identity.
Deaf children need deaf adults as role models and peers with whom they can interact and play.