Showing posts with label Gallaudet University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gallaudet University. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Nyle DiMarco - The Mecca Of The Deaf Community

VIDEO [CC] - Nyle DiMarco gives back the homecoming events at Gallaudet University campus, thousand attend this event.





WASHINGTON DC - NYLON: Since day one of the current America’s Next Top Model cycle, Nyle DiMarco has been an audience favorite.



DiMarco is the epitome of what Tyra Banks set out to do when she created the show 22 seasons and 12 years ago: to show that “perfect is boring.” He’s the first Deaf contestant to ever compete on the show and, from the looks of it, he could very well be crowned America's Next Top Model.



Join Top Model favorite Nyle DiMarco as he returns to his Alma Mater at Gallaudet University, the mecca of the Deaf Community. He talks sexual fluidity, his new sign language app, and the culture that defines Deaf Americans.





Internet Lingo Sign Language with Nyle DiMarco - Following last week’s challenge win, DiMarco showed us how to sign various “modern” terms in ASL. (Think: “bae,” “hmu,” and “selfie.”) It’s a little thing we like to call "Nyle DiMarco’s ASL Survical Guide."







About America’s Next Top Model - Cycle 22 of America’s Next Top Model, hosted by Tyra Banks, will feature the third “Guys and Girls” edition. Selected men and women living under one roof will battle it out to earn the prestigious title of America’s Next Top Model.



Connect with America’s Next Top Model Online:

Facebook - https://facebook.com/antm

Instagram - https://instagram.com/cw_antm

Twitter - https://twitter.com/cw_antm

Pinterest - https://pinterest.com/thecw/americas-next-top-model

America’s Next Top Model Website - http://on.cwtv.com/topmodel



Follow Nyle DiMarco:

Subscribe - https://youtube.com/nyle222

Facebook - https://facebook.com/nyledimarco

Twitter - https://twitter.com/nyledimarco

Instagram - https://instagram.com/nyledimarco

Model Mayhem - http://modelmayhem.com/nyledimarco

Linkedin - https://linkedin.com/in/nyledimarco

Tumblr - http://nyledimarco.tumblr.com

Official site - http://nyledimarco.com



Related:

ANTM Cycle 22 Finale Winner Is... Nyle DiMarco !

Nyle DiMarco - The Mecca Of The Deaf Community

Deaf Male Model - Introducing Nyle DiMarco

Top Models Learn ASL For Deaf Contestant

DCW50 Interviews Deaf Top Model Nyle DiMarco

ANTM Cycle 22 'BOOTYful' Music Video - Nyle

'ANTM' Contestant Nyle DiMarco's ASL Phrases

'ANTM' Nyle DiMarco Comes Out As Sexually Fluid

The Homosexual Scandal In Deaf Community

DEAFestival SWAG & Stilettos Fashion Show

Monday, October 7, 2013

Washington Food Market Becomes Hub For Deaf Community

VIDEO [CC] - Washington Food Market Becomes Hub for Deaf Community. VOA's Michael Lipin reports on the key elements that help to draw many hard of hearing customers to Union Market.



WASHINGTON - A year-old food market in a Washington, D.C., neighborhood has become a unique hub of shopping and dining for the city's Deaf community.



One feature that draws many hard of hearing customers to is the ability to communicate with staff members like Thadeus Suggs. The 23-year-old lunchtime food vendor from Seattle interacts with them easily because he is fluent in American Sign Language.



Suggs, who also is Deaf, began working at the historic market weeks after it opened in September 2012, following a major renovation.







Since then, Suggs has been on leave from his undergraduate studies across the street at Gallaudet University - the only university in the world specifically designed to accommodate deaf and hard of hearing students.



With the help of Gallaudet interpreter Carolyn Ressler, Suggs explained what he likes about his job.



"One nice thing is it is so close to Gallaudet, which by the way is the 'Deaf Mecca'," he said. "And with that, we are providing services to the Gallaudet community as well as the community at large. I think they benefit from it, as do I." Read more http://www.voanews.com/content/washington-food-market-becomes-hub-for-deaf-community/1762302.html

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Paranormal Activity At Gallaudet University Dorm

RAW VIDEO: Deaf students research the paranormal activity at Gallaudet University dorm.



WASHINGTON - The paranormal activity ghost poltergeist caught on video and a real surveillance which taping camera from several students from the Gallaudet University at Cogswell Hall a dorm campus and noticed that something a strange wandering around at a dorm and has been rumor that there is possbile the paranormal activity ghosts at Cogswell Hall when it remained that way all night time, because there was the case that a student who was murdered at gally's dorm campus on September 28, 2000, which the murder that shocks Deaf community.



A Deaf student from Japan explored a campus in the midnight. This footage will prove once and for all paranornal activities and ghosts exist! You will notice the movement... suggest y'all to click in full screen of this video and watch carefully... enjoy!









Note: This post and the video is fake and fiction.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Audism At Gallaudet University

ASL Version: Out of the entire world, within the walls of Gallaudet University Deaf Space. Profound Audism occurred.



SimComm Destroys both ASL and English. Audism also Destroys respect for Deaf people and their Deaf World especially at Gallaudet University.



Shane experienced profound Audism in Gallaudet University out of all places in the world. A place where the environment is safe for all Deaf people. This intrusion of SimComm and voicing is very irritating. He was not even angry at all at first. He wanted to give positive exposure to the fact it's not a good manner and that it is very disrespectful to Deaf people in general when hearing people SimComm, talking with the voice, using cell phones, etc.





He was hoping for dialogue and discussion to bring better understanding, respect and knowledge, but instead, this hearing student who claim to be a Coda got up and yelled at him with such profound venom, disrespect and hate. Such display of profound oppression has left him shocked and loss of words and thoughts. It even affected his friends at the table.



What hurts him more is that there are other Deaf people there who agreed with him, but sat and did nothing to stand up against Audism. He was even more shocked with the level of apathy. Are they so oppressed and thinking it's so difficult to fight it and they give up and just succumb to it?



Shane need your help to put an end to Audism from hearing students and put an end to apathy of Deaf people or their lack of courage to stand up for ASL and Deaf World.



Shane's vlog is not an attempt to degrade or belittle other people most especially the hearing group/CODA was referring about. His point was to bring this up to discussion and to raise awareness of Audism and acknowledgement of Deaf Space at Gallaudet University.



Please remain respectful and civil to each other in hopes we all meet together in harmony and mutual respect. Finally, He truly want to thank those who have shown support and encouragement. Thank you. Shane.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Gallaudet Students Come From Hearing World

Exclusive - More students at Gallaudet University now come from hearing world.





WASHINGTON - The quiet campus of Gallaudet University in Northeast Washington was always a place where students could speak the unspoken language of deaf America and be understood. That is no longer so ontrue. For the first time in living memory, significant numbers of freshmen at the nation's premiere university for the deaf and hard of hearing arrive lacking proficiency in American Sign Language and experience with deaf culture. Rising numbers of Gallaudet students are products of a hearing world.



The share of undergraduates who come from mainstream public schools rather than residential schools for the deaf has grown from 33 percent to 44 percent in four years. The number of students with cochlear implants, which stimulate the auditory nerve to create a sense of sound, has doubled to 102 since 2005. Gallaudet is also enrolling more hearing students in programs to train sign-language interpreters and teachers. Together, the changes are redefining a school that sits at the very epicenter of American deaf society.



A new generation of deaf and hard-of-hearing children can study where they please. Changes in federal law have rerouted deaf students from residential deaf schools to mainstream public campuses, which are now obliged to serve them.



Cochlear implants are gaining acceptance and changing the nature of deafness, although the deaf community remains divided on their use. The influx of "non-signers," who can hear and speak or who read lips or text, may be necessary for Gallaudet's survival. Yet it has sparked passionate debate on whether the university is becoming "hearing-ized" and whether deaf culture is slipping away. "We want a signing environment, because how often do deaf students get that environment?" said Dylan Hinks, 20, student body president. "This is the place where I want to have comfort and ease in my communication." There was talk of a vanishing deaf culture at Gallaudet five years ago, when protesters shut down the campus over the appointment of then-Provost Jane Fernandes as president.



More than 100 demonstrators were arrested. Trustees eventually revoked the appointment. The consensus on campus today is that the protest centered on the propriety of the presidential search. Protesters said outgoing President I. King Jordan hijacked the proceedings to elevate Fernandes, his protege. But Fernandes portrayed herself as a casualty in a deaf-culture war. Born deaf, Fernandes grew up speaking English and learned to sign as an adult. She claimed that, to students advocating the primacy of sign language, she was "not deaf enough." Fernandes now serves as provost of the University of North Carolina at Asheville. In an e-mail interview, she said, "There remains entrenched at Gallaudet a strong deaf culture that perpetuates a very narrow way to live as a deaf person." One year during her tenure as provost, Fernandes said, upperclass students hazed freshmen, ordering them not to speak in any of their classes so that they were forced to sign. "I had freshmen in tears, telling me that Gallaudet recruited them under false pretenses, because they were told Gallaudet welcomed all deaf students," she said. After Fernandes's ouster, accreditors from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education put Gallaudet on probation. The censure dealt a stunning blow to Gallaudet's academic currency. Some feared that the school would close. Accreditors found academic standards virtually nonexistent. The university admitted students who could not graduate and employed professors who could barely sign.



The institution was not keeping pace with the changing deaf world. Undergraduate enrollment had slipped from 1,274 in fall 2005 to 1,040 in 2007. The Gallaudet of today scarcely resembles that fractured campus. President T. Alan Hurwitz, recruited away from a rival deaf school within New York's Rochester Institute of Technology, has raised standards and largely united Gallaudet around a new vision of bilingual deaf education. "People are beginning to realize that American Sign Language is a value added," said Hurwitz, who has been deaf since birth and is a fluent signer. Hurwitz was so wary of Gallaudet's history that he turned down the search committee several times before consenting to an interview. On the day he was introduced as president, Hurwitz said, "We didn't know if everyone was going to stand up and protest." Twenty months into his administration, there is little to protest.



Gallaudet's graduation rate has risen from 25 percent to 41 percent in four years. The share of graduates who continue their education has nearly doubled to 63 percent. The school has raised admission requirements, and average ACT reading scores for entering freshmen are at their highest point in recent history. Undergraduate enrollment has rebounded to 1,118. Hurwitz has calmed the culture wars with a schoolwide policy that affirms the primacy of sign language but also posits Gallaudet as a bilingual school.



Professors now must prove mastery of sign language to get tenure. Students, too, are expected to sign. In a campuswide e-mail last fall, Hurwitz wrote: "Everyone on campus no matter his or her signing level should make every effort to communicate in sign language when in public areas on campus." But upholding that standard is increasingly difficult on a campus where nearly half of the freshmen now come from mainstream high schools and dozens arrive not knowing how to sign. To help them, university leaders last year created a six-week crash course for 46 new signers, an orientation to Gallaudet and to the Deaf world.



An explosive opinion piece in the school newspaper last fall decried the rise of non-signers on campus and the potential demise of "the one deaf space we can have in this country." Some students agree. Others favor a more patient approach to new signers. "They've been speaking for years, and then they come here and they're expected to sign," said Tony Tatum, a 23-year-old senior. "It's a hard habit for them to break." Tatum sat with four other students in the campus dining hall on a recent day. Three of them, including Tatum, came from public schools and learned to sign at an advanced age. "Before I came to Gallaudet, I thought I was the only person in the world who was hard of hearing," Tatum said. Now, he plays on Gallaudet's celebrated football team, a squad that invented the huddle in the 1890s as a way to hide signs from the other side.



Easter Faafiti, a 22-year-old junior, didn't know about Gallaudet until she took a sign language course at a community college. Her hearing parents "knew nothing about deaf culture, not one thing." At the lunch table, Faafiti and Tatum communicated in sign, even though both are more comfortable with spoken English. "I would prefer to speak," Tatum said. "But if I'm going to speak to someone who can't hear me, that makes no sense." Leila Hanaumi, a 21-year-old senior, attended a deaf school and knew Gallaudet and its history when she enrolled. She's one of a few on campus who fully appreciate how much the school has improved; at an institution where the population turns over every few years, memories are short. "In my class, we have the highest retention rate in I don't know how long," she said. Most of her class will graduate within five years, "and that's pretty much unheard of." The university's future may depend on reaching further into the mainstream of American education.



Gallaudet recruiters have tripled the number of annual visits to public schools since 2006. A trip might focus on one or two students who know nothing of Gallaudet. Charity Reedy-Hines, the chief recruiter, recalled a recent visit to a public high school in Mississippi where recruiters met with two deaf students. "Both of them had never met another person like themselves," she said. "They hadn't even met each other." Read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/more-students-at-gallaudet-university-in-washington-now-come-from-hearing-world/story.html



Gallaudet University is the world leader in liberal education and career development for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing undergraduate students. The University enjoys an international reputation for the outstanding graduate programs it provides Deaf, Hard-of-Hearing, and hearing students, as well as for the quality of the research it conducts on the history, language, culture, and other topics related to Deaf people. Visit Gallaudet: www.gallaudet.edu for more informations.



Find more Gallaudet videos: Gallaudet Channel



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