Wow, thank you for sharing further details! I am so glad that people
are now "meeting in the middle" so much more in education, and
realizing that knowing how to sign isn't going to steal away all of a
person's English-learning abilities, but contrarily, can enhance them. <br>
Strong person, you, to persevere despite such teachers!<br>
It will be exciting to see the longterm results of the New Mexico, Nicaragua, and German programs.<br>
Best,<br>
Kim<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/14/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Valerie Sutton</b> <<a href="mailto:signwriting@mac.com">signwriting@mac.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
SignWriting List<br>January 14, 2007<br><br>Kim -<br>That would be an appropriate question about the kids in Albuquerque,<br>New Mexico, who learned SignWriting officially for a period of years,<br>in elementary school...they are now in Middle School...and the same
<br>question could be asked of James Shepard Kegl about the kids who<br>learned SignWriting for years in Nicaragua, or to Stefan, whose<br>students have learned SignWriting for years in Germany...<br><br>but regarding the children who were introduced to SignWriting by me,
<br>for exactly ONE hour only, back in 1977...I never saw them again! And<br>their teachers were angry to be interrupted by this weird woman who<br>wanted to see if ASL-signing Deaf students, who were in a special<br>class because their English skills were low, would take to writing
<br>ASL quickly or not...Their signing skills were high according to the<br>principal...it was just their second language English which was a<br>problem as it would have been for me too, if I were in those<br>student's positions...
<br><br>The success was so obvious in just one hour, that it truly astonished<br>me, and disappointed me, to see how angry the teachers were...they<br>believed in presenting English without ASL...let alone writing<br>it...this was back in 1977 when ASL was just becoming more
<br>accepted...and while they saw the excitement in the students...they<br>were actually jealous of the attention I got...and I would also like<br>to note that they were all hearing and did not necessarily know ASL<br>themselves...so the teachers would have been at a disadvantage too,
<br>because they would have had to learn SignWriting to keep up with the<br>class themselves...so how could they even consider teaching something<br>they did not know themselves?<br><br>Complicated psychology...But that was way back in 1977...
<br><br>Mainly the point is that even within one hour, signing Deaf children<br>can become inspired by SignWriting...I am so happy that Cherie and<br>Donna had that experience two days ago!<br><br>And it was that first experience for me, that gave me the courage to
<br>continue working with SignWriting...I could see there might be some<br>value someday, for someone in the world...<br><br>Val ;-)<br><br><br><br><br>Kimberley Shaw wrote:<br>> Hello Val:<br>> out of curiosity ... do you have any way of knowing what these now
<br>> grown-up kids are doing these days?<br>> Any of them still use SW?<br>> -- Kim from Boston<br>><br>><br>> I presented SignWriting to ASL Deaf kids in New Hampshire in 1977,<br>> for exactly one hour...they were writing in SignWriting all over the
<br>> board themselves, before I barely had a chance to start!<br><br><br></blockquote></div><br>