Maybe you have stumbled upon me describing myself as a deaf person, but have heard a recording of me speak, or have spoken with me directly. Maybe you are a grammarian have seen me say that I am Deaf, and think: but “deaf” isn’t a proper noun? In the Deaf community, “deaf” with the lowercase-d refers to hearing loss, i.e., deafness as an audiological condition; the word “Deaf” with the capital-D refers to being a member of a linguistic/cultural minority: a minority of persons with hearing loss and use a signed language to communicate. The National Association of the Deaf (NAD) has a FAQ page briefly explaining some of different between deaf, Deaf, outdated terms such as “deaf-and-dumb”, and clinical terms such as “hearing-impaired”.
General Information
No one seems to want to read books. So, here are three YouTube resources: two by the Minnesota state government and one by Barb DiGi AKA avbria.
- “What is Deaf Culture?”
- “Information on deafness from an audiological perspective.”
- “Should we get rid of small d in Deaf?”
Book Recommendations
In no particular order, these are good information about d/Deafness from a general sense. Padden’s is the shortest.
- Carol Padden, Deaf in America
- Jack Gannon, Deaf History
- Harlan Lane, The Mask of Benevolence (an excerpt of Chapter 2, translated into signs, can be found here)
- Paddy Ladd, Understanding Deaf Culture: In Search of Deafhood
Film Recommendations
- Through Deaf Eyes, available captions and freely on YouTube through Gallaudet University Press.
- For a Deaf Son, available through the Described and Captioned Media Program freely on YouTube.
- CODA Bonnie Kraft’s interview with Gallaudet University Deaf Studies department’s Ben Bahan on DawnSignPress’ Tomorrow Dad Will Still Be Deaf and Other Stories (available on DVD and for rental/sale on DawnSignPress’ Vimeo store for $6 to rent or $8 to buy)—persons with whom I have a professional relationship are highly advised to wartch the 45-minute interview to learn about cross-cultural issues from a culturally Deaf/culturally hearing point of views. The story “Papa Breaks His Hip“, from the time-stamp 22:27 to 29:20, are critical for healthcare professionals coordinate care for d/Deaf/hard-of-hearing. If you have bought the video on Vimeo, you can click the story title when logged-in and it should take you right to that story! You may wish to watch the first two videos in the “General information” section if you are unfamiliar with hearing-loss and d/Deaf as distinct constructs.
- Free stories from DawnSignPress’s Facebook page: “No Interpretation Required“; “CODA is my Deaf Club“; “The Trouble With Tarantulas“
- Bonnie Kraft is also the manager of the CEU-granting business (with the national RID and its Massachusetts chapter) Seasoned, Not Old. This is for interpreters over 40 years of age with at least ten year’s experience. Here is the official “Seasoned Not Old” Facebook group, where others might post other courses/workshops.
Sign Language Resources
Language is best learnt through interaction with the native using community. For signs, this is residential schools for the deaf, places such as Gallaudet University–although I can personally say that Gallaudet “University” does not prioritize equity for students with additional disabilities; please contact me directly if you really want to know my experiences–and the National Technical Institute of the Deaf at the Rochester Institute of Technology. I’ve only used the first two directly; I’m familiar with many contributors in True Way, particularly Nathie Marbury.
- DawnSignPress, Signing Naturally curriculum.
- SignEnhancers, Bravo! ASL. featuring Billy Seago.
- TrueWay ASL curriculum
Fingerspelling and Numbering Resources
Fingerspelling is the manual representation of the majority language’s alphabet and numerals using the digit(s) of the hand(s). In American Sign Language, the proper use of fingerspelling is for proper nouns, technical jargon, or borrowed terms from the majority language. When fingerspelling takes on a more rhythmic/directional quality that looks more akin to a distinct sign rather than a discrete fingerspelled word, this is called a “fingerspell-loan sign”, or more formally, lexicalized fingerspelling. Some examples of signs that have standard lexicalized equivalents are “car”, “back”, and “glue”. In sign gloss, true fingerspelling is only hyphenated; glossed are preceded by the pound/hash symbol. It is thought to be the hardest skill for non-native signers to acquire at a native-level. Fortunately, there are free (or very cheap) resources that can be found very easily with Web access. The following are resources for fingerspelling and numbering in Amemrican Sign Language. Unlike English, which is a common language to the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, their respective signed languages have completely different manual alphabets, numbering systems, and signed vocabulary.
The Original Signing Naturally I Curriculum by DawnSignPress
I am so old that I remember when Signing Naturally I was a single volume light-blue and watching it as a traditional VHS videotape the semester of high-school I had to take off to have bilateral hamstring tenotomy’s. You can find a cheap copy of it and its accompanying DVD on eBay. Here are the most important parts:
- Unit 1: Language in Action – Introducing yourself- (both conversations)
- Unit 2: Grammar Practice: Question type demonstration, numbers 1-10; number phrases (write the number signed)
- Unit 3: Fingerspelling Part 1
- Unit 4: Grammar Practice, Numbers 11-20
- Unit 5: Fingerspelling Part 2
- Unit 6: Numbers 21-30
- Unit 7: Ordinal numbers, Fingerspelling part 3
- Unit 8: Numbers, multiples of 10 and 11
- Unit 9, money numbers
- Unit 10: Age numbers, Fingerspelling part 4
- Unit 11: Numbers 67-98
- Unit 12: Clock numbers
General Fingerspelling Guidance and Practise
- The alphabet and general guidelines
- Receptive practising videos from Dr. Bill Vicars’ YouTube
- Dr. Mish Kteijik’s Fingerspell.Me Website – Mish was an interpreter of mine at Northern Virginia Community College when I took American literature I in Summer 2011. She is a NIC-certified interpreter with subspecialty certificate in legal interpreting. This resource is CEU-giving from the Registry of the Interpreters of the Deaf!!
- Dr. Carol Patrie: Fingerspelled Names & Introductions: A Template Building Approach
- Cinnie McDougall: Number Signs for Everyone: Numbering in American Sign Language
Are You Interested in Sign Language Interpreting as A Career Choice?
Sign-language interpreting is a wonderful profession. There are two kinds of sign interpreters generally: hearing and Deaf. A Deaf interpreter can work solo or works as a team, either with another Deaf interpreter or with a hearing interpreter, to provide access to signers who either have minimal language skills, do not know the majority/country signed language, have additional disabilities (blindness, low vision, strokes, musculoskeletal pnroblems, etc) that make solo-interpreting by just a hearing interpreter difficult or impossible. Deaf interpreters can also work individually as SSPs for deaf-blind individuals. The below are public, active Web resources pertaining to The United States of America.
- The Registry of the Interpreters for the Deaf, Inc.–official Web site
- Discover Interpreting! Facebook group
- Information on Support Service Professionals for deafblind individuals, a discrete yet interwoven class of professionals as Deaf interpreters from the Helen Keller Center Web site
What is Deaf Gain?
Deaf Gain is a social construct in opposition to the clinical concept of hearing loss, i.e., in embracing that one is Deaf, one gains tangible benefits. There is myriad research on the benefits of bimodal bilingualism for Deaf babies. Learning signs first does not hinder the acquisition of spoken language, and there is copious research that suggests that strong fingerspellers are strong readers. On social media such as Twitter and Facebook, you may see the hashtag #DeafGain. Of course, the etiologies of deafness are many (see video referenced above) and, the literature suggests that early implantation of children followed by aggressive speech-language pathology in an oral/spoken language that language acquisition is possible. Several conditions that cause deafness such as Ménière’s disease (which both actresses Switched at Birth‘s Katie Leclerc and Tony Award-winner Wicked‘s Kristen Chenoweth have), also cause debilitating vertigo due to the effects on the inner-ear system that can be successfully managed with cochlear implantation. I know many native Deaf signers who can speak. I myself can speak fairly well. I am a proud alumnus of The Ohio School for the Deaf, and I support the right of Deaf babies to grow up bilingual, as Barb DiGi expands on an ASL translation of an original essay by François Grosjean [this is in English].
Last Updated: 30. Sep 2024