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NY Times: Budget Cuts Polarising Deaf Education

The increasing cohort of 21st century parents and deaf children who choose technology like cochlear implants in place of learning sign-language, is documented in a front-page article in The New York Times (July 27, 2011).

Less than 20 percent of all families [with deaf children] choose American Sign Language, with 80 percent wanting their children to enjoy sounds [with cochlear implants] and to be able to listen and speak, the piece reports.

The two main communication options: (1) sign language and (2) the listening and spoken (auditory-verbal) language approach  are widely used in deaf education. Both are a matter of personal choice [by parents], but in the US, tight budgets for deaf education are turning preferences to policy decisions.

  • Read The New York Times piece >>

Further Reading

* Amidst Budget Cuts, Tensions Over Teaching Deaf People (NYTimes.com)

* Disagreements On Deaf Education Emerge As Funds Get Scarce

* Is Technology Killing Sign Language? (gizmodo.com)

* What Exactly Does Oral Deaf Education Involve?

* Clarke School ‘Maps’ Changes In Deaf Education

Aug 5, 2011Team Sound Advice

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What Does Oral-Deaf Education Involve?Waterford Regional Hospital Next In UNHS Line
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13 years ago 3 Comments HearingASL, budget, choice, cochlear, communication, concept, cuts, deaf, deaf education in Ireland, deafness, decision, decisions, education, families, family, inclusion, informed, integration, ISL, language, learn, learning, mainstream, option, oral, parent, parents, policy, pressure, role model, role models, school for deaf, sibling, sign, students, visual, words168
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