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American Sign Language Deaf Culture Essay

Related Topics: Deaf Education Respect Languages

Pages:2 (631 words)

Sources:2

Subject:Communication

Topic:Deaf Culture

Document Type:Essay

Document:#94099029


Sign of Respect

In this video, the basic message is that as new signers we should act with the same level of respect that we use with the hearing, that is, if we do not understand, express this honestly.

Certainly, just as in the scene where someone such as Amy do not understand, answer b should always be our answer. However, beyond just expressing understanding or lack thereof as a sin of respect (or disrespect) to a deaf person is not enough. We must use this as a template for all of our interactions with the deaf community. Just as we would like the Golden Rule and the benefit of the doubt applied to us, we need to give the same consideration first so that we deserve to have it from the deaf.

If we treat the hearing impaired as if they are not aware, what does this say about ourselves and our manners? If we see this simply as an exercise in good manners, it will not be so difficult to see the hearing impaired community as anything other than normal people who deserve the same respect that we do in any situation where we may not have the same access to or level of communication in a data set as we might like to have.

There are more similarities than differences between the hearing impaired community and the hearing community. Just as they wish to have respect, they wish to have it just as much as we do. Indeed, a "handicap" is simply propelled by perception. If one has never heard, they have no idea that they are "behind" or "handicapped." Any situation is a double edged sword. It can go both ways.

Do those in the hearing impaired community have many of the experiences that happened between those in the video in the Deaf Community Center and someone who hears such as…


Sample Source(s) Used

Works Cited

Mindess, A., & Holcomb, T.K. (2011). A sign of respect [DVD].

Strategies for teaching students with hearing impairments. (2010). Retrieved

from http://www.as.wvu.edu/~scidis/hearing.html.

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