This document discusses issues related to educating deaf and hard of hearing students. Historically, these students were educated in separate schools for the deaf where sign language was used, but views on the best approach have changed over time. Currently, there is a debate between fully including these students in mainstream classrooms versus using bilingual education programs that incorporate sign language. Factors like the IDEA, NCLB, and increasing use of cochlear implants have impacted this issue. Determining the optimal educational environment requires considering the needs and preferences of students, families, and educators.
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Issue Brief
1. Emily Ward
SPED 517
7 November 2011
Issue Brief
Bilingual/Bicultural Issues and Deafness: A Review
Nationwide, just over 0.1 percent of school-age children are deaf or hard of hearing (National
Center on Severe and Sensory Disabilities, 2008). This population, although seemingly small, offers a
unique challenge to educators to determine how best to provide them with a free, appropriate, public
education. Because of the nature of their disability, students who are deaf or hard of hearing often
enter school significantly behind their peers without auditory disabilities in terms of language
development, and to best serve them, educators and parents must work together to decide what path
will provide them with an appropriate education in the least restrictive environment possible. Over the
past several decades, the popular opinion on how to do this has changed several times, ranging from full
English immersion in inclusive classrooms, to a bilingual curriculum in separate schools for the Deaf, and
many programs in between. The now-common practice of using cochlear implants has introduced a new
twist on the educational road for this population, and educators are still struggling to determine the
best course of action.
Historically, the education of children who are deaf or hard of hearing has been an inconsistent
one. The American School for the Deaf and Dumb, established in the late 1800s, was the first school to
offer formal education to students who were deaf, with the introduction of a formal signing system. As a
result of this program, soon most states adopted mandates that similar schools be built for these
children throughout the country, fostering the birth of Deaf culture. These schools allowed children who
were deaf or hard of hearing to finally have a community of peers where their deafness was not seen as
a hindrance, but a necessary feature for inclusion. Despite the obvious benefits of these new
communities, many educators argued against the standard use of sign, as they felt that sign language
2. was not a “true” language. It wasn’t until 1960 that linguist William Stokoe proved that the foundations
of sign language were equivalent with all other human languages, and American Sign Language (ASL)
was born (DeLana, Gentry, & Andrews, 2007).
Although it was clear to educators that students needed to be able to read and write in English
to be successful, how students with hearing impairments would be taught changed in the 1980s, as the
language and culture of the Deaf community began to be increasingly valued. Bilingual programs were
introduced, based significantly on the “theory of linguistic interdependence”, which proposes that
students will be able to transfer linguistic and literary skills to a second language (in this case, English), if
they are first proficient in a natural sign language and that sign language is used for instruction (Mayer &
Leigh, 2010). Throughout the ’80s and ’90s, bilingual education for students with hearing impairments
became more fully adopted nationally, primarily in state schools for the Deaf. The specific nature of
these programs varied, some using ASL as primary mode of instruction, others incorporating contact
signing, cued speech, finger spelling, and auditory/verbal therapy into their programs. Today, schools for
the Deaf are still using a combination of these techniques (Ahearn, 2011). However, with the 2004
revision of IDEA and the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), the push toward inclusive education for
students with disabilities has caused a shift in the educational environments of students who are deaf
and hard of hearing. Additionally, the increasing numbers of children who receive cochlear implants
have shifted the needs of bilingual education for students with hearing impairments as well (Sweet-
Barnard, Dozier, Finnerty & Ferrell, 2008).
Various parties have a significant stake in this issue. First of all, educators have the responsibility
to provide free, appropriate, public education to all students, and the needs of this particular population
can be extremely varied and costly. No student with hearing impairments comes to the education
system with the same linguistic background or needs—ranging from fully developed ASL signers of deaf
3. parents to children with little to no language acquisition due to minimal exposure to sign—and
determining the best action for these students can often become a matter of what the district or school
can afford to provide (although according to the law, cost should not be a factor). Secondly, parents
rightly have strong opinions on how their child should be educated, and these opinions don’t always
match with what the school has determined to be the best approach. In one example in which the
school decided to educate the child using an oral method in a classroom for students with and without
disabilities, the parents, who were deaf themselves, felt this detracted from their child’s sense of self
and right to accessible education (Pittman & Huefner, 2001). The most important stakeholder to
consider, however, is the individual child. If the significant and distinctive learning needs of a child who
is deaf or hearing impaired are not appropriately handled, that child may experience “delays in language
acquisition and communication development, as well as poor academic achievement, delays in critical
thinking skills, and difficulties with social and emotional development” (Sweet-Barnard, et.al., p. 3).
However, if handled appropriately, students with hearing impairments can be competitive with, and in
some cases, surpass standards for progress of their peers without hearing impairments (DeLana, et.al., p
85).
As mentioned above, IDEA and NCLB have changed the ways many programs function for
students with hearing impairments. One major provision of IDEA that has benefitted these students is
the specification that requires IEP teams to determine the communication method as well as the
teaching method to be used with students who are deaf or hard of hearing, implying that the child’s
preferred method of communication is to be the mode of instruction (Pittman & Huefner 2001). Further,
the accountability factors stressed by NCLB have caused early bilingual programs that typically have a
larger focus on literary and language development to also push more math and science skills than before
(Sweet-Barnard, et. al., p.6). One area of major confusion, however, lies in the requirement of the least
restrictive environment for students. Typically, this is thought to mean that it is preferable to include
4. children with disabilities in classrooms with students without disabilities whenever possible. However,
for students with hearing impairments, whether inclusion in the mixed classrooms is in fact “least-
restrictive” is debatable, as placement among other children with hearing impairments can increase
communication and confidence (Moore, 2011).
As medical technologies are emerging that make it easier for children who are deaf and hard of
hearing to participate in classrooms with their peers without hearing impairments, it seems as though
this issue is becoming the standard debate of medical versus social model of disability. Should our goal
be to “fix” the deafness to make children with hearing impairments more capable of interacting with
their hearing peers, or should our goal be to foster the unique Deaf culture that students who are deaf
or hard of hearing can bring to the world? Which is better for the student? I think the answer to this
question is extremely difficult to impose on families and it should be the family’s choice of whether to
send the child to an inclusive classroom in a local school or a separate school for the Deaf. Also, I agree
with Donald Moore, editor of American Annals of the Deaf, who calls for more research to be done in
this field to determine which path is more supportive of student needs (2008). Although data cannot
fully solve this highly-charged issue, it can support our decision-making so that we can make the best
possible choices for our children.
5. References
Ahearn, E.M. (2011). Children who are Deaf/hard of hearing: State of the educational practices. Project
Forum at NASDSE. Alexandria, VA.
Andrews, J.F. & Rusher, M. (2010). Codeswitching techniques: Evidence-based instructional practices
for the ASL/English bilingual classroom. American Annals of the Deaf, 155(4), 407-424.
DeLana, M., Gentry, M.A., & Andrews, J. (2007). The efficacy of ASL/English bilingual education:
Considering public schools. American Annals of the Deaf, 152(1), 73-86.
Knoors, A.& Renting, B. (2000). Measuring the quality of education: The involvement of bilingually
educated deaf children. American Annals for the Deaf, 154(3), 268-274.
Mayer, C. & Leigh, G. (2010). The changing context for sign bilingual education programs: Issues in
language and the development of literacy. International Journal of Bilingual Education and
Bilingualism, 13(2), 175-186.
Moores, D. (2008). Research on Bi-Bi instruction. American Annals of the Deaf, 153(1), 3-4.
Moores, D.F. (2011). Waist deep in the Big Muddy: The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
and No Child Left Behind (NCLB). American Annals of the Deaf, 155(5), 523-525.
National Center on Severe and Sensory Disabilities. (2008). Considerations in providing a free,
appropriate, public education to students who are deaf and hard of hearing in North Dakota.
Greeley, CO: Sweet-Barnard, S., Dozier, C., Finnerty, M., & Ferrell, K.A.
Pittman, P. & Huefner, D.S. (2001). Will the Courts go Bi-Bi? IDEA 1997, the Courts, and deaf education.
Exceptional Children, 67(2), 187-198.