Sunday, December 8, 2013

PLE Group Differences

I thought the discussion was extremely interesting. All of the articles were very interesting and it was fascinating to see how related some of the articles were. The urban group were talking about a lot of the same things that our article talked about. As far as our personal discussion, it was good at first, but the discussion turned to the basics of ASL and deafness instead of the basis of the article. I strongly agreed with my article in that Deaf culture and ASL needs to be taken into consideration more when planning education. The little discussion we had about it, the class seemed to agree and were surprised to find out the truth. As I said before, the discussion turned to basics of ASL and deafness and it is always great for us to advocate for the Deaf and answer questions but I would have liked to focus more on the education and the articles. I did not have a chance to relate our own article to the other one and how it speaks about moral debt and separating certain groups because this relates to Deaf children all too well. This will affect my future practice because I will always be advocating for Deaf students and know that they learn differently and know that hearing teachers are making decisions for them. I will know that ASL is their first language and use that as the way to teach and model English as a second language.

PLE 401 Participation Evaluation

I believe my participation in this class would be 90/100. In class I always participated to the best of my ability. I actively participated in class discussions and group work. Tickets out the door were sometimes more tricky. When the questions were about what we learned and general thoughts, I had an easy time explaining my thoughts and feelings. When the questions turned to implementing what we talked about in our future classrooms, I really struggled and had no idea what to write. I would try to think of something that I would see as an interpreter but most of the time it was almost impossible yet I would still try to participate and come up with something. This was also the case with some of the PLE's all of them except one or two were easy and I had a good time relating them to interpreting and they definitely helped with my CSEL. But there were a few that were close to impossible for me as an interpreter so I would have to deduct participation points there. I missed two classes and started improving on showing up on time so I think this was actually an improvement compared to my mid-semester evaluation. I always did the reading and picking out quotes to talk about. This really helped me because I am not a teacher so I really needed the extra explanations sometimes. Overall, I have participated well and done my best to contribute as an interpreter.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

PLE 3

I was so excited to see Trix Bruce again. I have seen her before at an Interpreting convention but this was much different. This time she was demonstrating her difficulties in the hearing world and it was amazing. Because of my experience in this class, I really focused on the difficulties she had growing up in school. I had a great advantage in knowing sign language because she is very artistic in her signing and it is poetic in sign language and I could appreciate that instead of just reading her slides. Some of the challenges she faced were things that I am going to witness as an interpreter and it really made me think just how hard it will be for some of my students. For example, she was in a group project and she had been emailing them all these great ideas and contributing to the group and the next day the group went up to the teacher and asked who she was. They had never socialized with her, had never spoken to her and had no idea who she was other than her name from the emails. She was never involved in groups at school because she couldn't understand or communicate with them. She was always stared at because of her hearing aids. I have heard many Deaf kids say that it makes them feel like a robot. Many people didn't know how to use a TTY with a deaf person so they would answer it, hear it was an interpreter and just hang up, never accept her calls. She was very light hearted about all of it though which impacted me in a big way. This is something that I hope I can use and encourage in future students. For example she said when she had an FM system which is basically headphones and the teacher had a microphone and she would play with the headphones because it did not work anyway. She joked about how people would yell if she couldn't hear them or slow down and exaggerate what they were saying as if that would help. She emphasized the lip reading problems about how most words look alike and things can be taken the wrong way often. As a kid, she hurt her wrist and she was supposed to rest it. But that is telling a child not to talk so that was impossible. She joked about so much of it but you could tell there was a lot of it that really was emotional and I am going to see so much of both in my future career. Being around so many different types of children and being so focused on one that is most likely going to be isolated this experience started me thinking of millions of ways that I could change that such as encouraging interactions with peers, and interpreting interactions with peers. It is usually really frustrating as an interpreter when 20 people a day come up to you and tell you to teach them sign language. Where do you want me to start? Do you want to know the whole language right now? I need to be interpreting for this child right now, not distracted. But maybe in the lower levels I could encourage the deaf student to help me teach their peers some signs. Also, help with motivation and ideas for joining groups etc.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

PLE 5

Being an interpreter, I have little control over the learning environment in the classroom. What I will have to pay attention to is the learning environment for the deaf student individually. I could speak with teacher about her own classroom environment first and give her information about the interpreting process and any adjustments that would be necessary for the deaf student. For example, the student benefits most from seeing the board and teacher at all times but they will also have to see me as the interpreter. This visual necessity includes lighting as well as placement. It is best that the interpreter not be in front of a window that the student might have a glare from. If it is possible, I would request that the student and I be in front of one another as close to the front of the classroom as possible. Aside from the physical environment of the deaf student in the classroom, it is important that an interpreter have somewhat of an established relationship with the student. It is important to know the students needs and language preference in order to make them feel comfortable in their learning environment. It is not often that deaf children get to talk to adults that know sign language so when they get the chance, some of them like to talk a lot. Before and after class they will often have outside conversations and it is important to make sure that relationship is comfortable yet professional. They have to be able to trust you and trust that they are getting all of the information the same as their hearing peers and without any relationship, they will never be able to trust you. If they don't, the interpreter is also the language model so it is vital to make sure that you are modeling language every time you are using it. It is also important to know the students needs, not only linguistically but academically. It is not the interpreters role to ever help or assist a teacher or student, but in much younger grades, it is often acceptable to help in some situations depending on your student. If you have the relationship and know the needs of your student, the learning environment is comfortable, and successful. In my case study, there is a student that is not paying attention. The first step has already been taken and I tried to find out if there was a problem with my interpreting, if I was using the wrong language, if he had different linguistic needs, and he walked away. As an interpreter, I will be the first person to notice this students behavior and it is my role to inform the teacher that he is failing his assignments because of his attention and behavior, not because he is not understanding, or that there is a language barrier. As an interpreter, that is where my role ends. In the case study, the teacher tells me to call and meet with the parents but that is not my place. I am not the instructor, I am simply the language bridge. I can offer to sit in the meeting after the teachers sets it up with the parents since I am the one seeing his behavior the closest but it is not my job or place to set up meetings like that or to do anything about that behavior. I am not a disciplinarian, it is the teachers place to decide on punishments and action, all I can do is provide the information I have from my observations.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

PLE 4

I have always been motivated by intrinsic values. When I was younger I was a dancer and practiced and performed just so I could get better, not for a reward. I have always felt that success is my reward. I was always allowed to choose what I wanted to do as far as school and activities. I chose to go to a private all girls college prep school to get the best education. When I got to college, I found my major and loved it so much that getting to do it everyday felt like a reward in itself. Striving to be the best in it, and knowing I am good at it is all the motivation I need. I have always felt like I was very lucky to feel this way because not everyone loves what they do this much and I thought it was just lucky I found my "calling" but I guess I am just really self-motivated. This seems to be within the cognitive-theories of self determination and being able to choose what I want to do. Also within the social-cognitive theories, I believe in my abilities with sign language interpreting which is daily encouragement and makes it not seem like work. I don't know if I would be nearly as motivated if I was more limited in my choices by my family or in school. I have also been much less motivated in activities I do not enjoy. In math classes, I struggle. In history I can barely stay awake, but in the most advanced ASL classes, I show up early, do extra credit, have straight A's, and could answer any question about anything. I have kept thinking about the discussion in class about giving students the opportunity to choose projects. This option to choose has worked so well for me in every aspect of my life so I believe it would work well for other students as well. Most importantly I think teachers can come up with creative was to come up with options that are different enough to appeal to different types of learners while keeping them equally as challenging and educational. Then the students will have more likely to be motivated by the choice and possibly choosing the one that interests them more.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

PLE 2

Being a student myself I have experienced many if not all of these teaching assessments first hand. I found it interesting how the chapter pointed out that there are many times that students are being assessed and are unaware of it. Informal assessments are being done constantly on a daily basis just by observing the students. What was interesting to me was thinking how each of these assessments would play out in a deaf residential school working with deaf students. These assessments may vary but are often used for similar things as in the mainstream school (ex. plan for the future, assessing teaching skills, assessing performance) Informal Assessments are constantly being made with deaf students regarding their use of language, and social skills because each student it different. These students may come from hearing families with hearing parents and not know any sign language, or they may come from deaf families and not know any English. These are things that are noticed simply by observing the child in their natural environment using their comfortable language. Formal Assessments are usually altered based on the student and what is observed through the informal assessments. If students have no English skills the tests will have to be given in ASL, using an interpreter, or deaf teacher. These alterations make the line between the next two types of assessments (paper-pencil assessment vs performance assessment) very blurry. Paper and Pencil Assessment ASL actually does have a written form and the students are taught reading and writting so written tests and hypothetical situations are possible for them to be assessed. Performance Tests these are used often with deaf students. They do not have nearly as much experience with the hearing world as mainstreamed students so teachers and volunteer students (like myself) try to set up many "mock situations" in which they would be out in the world and need to use an interpreter and make sure they have the information on how to do so after graduation. Performance tests are extremely important for deaf students. Traditional vs. Authentic Assessment when deaf students reach high school, the amount of traditional assessment is very minimal. The focus is on authentic assessment. The sad truth is that everyone knows the deaf students are going to have a harder time finding employment than any of their hearing peers. To hopefully aid them in ensuring employment, the high school education is extremely authentic. It is always related to real world experiences, and applied to real situations that they can use later in the workplace. Standardized Tests deaf students in mainstream schools do participate in the same standardized tests that we have all endured. As I mentioned before, some students may have slightly differing language skills therefore deaf students are often allowed extra time, or an interpreter. This in no way makes the tests comprehensible to all deaf individuals, therefore bringing average deaf schools scores extremely low. Teacher-Developed Assessments these usually work much better in all settings involving deaf students. In residential schools, the teachers know each of the students language skills and can communicate with the directly and know how to communicate the assessment to the students. In a mainstream school the interpreter is with the student in the classroom and the language is somewhat familiar and can be understood more easily. When the language is familiar, it is much easier whether it be ASL, signed English, spoken English, etc. and that is the main problem with any kind of assessment given to deaf students, not the information. Criterion-Referenced vs. Norm-Referenced Assessments because of all of the challenges and barriers I have listed and the lack of resources for not only teachers of deaf students but even families of deaf children, it is clear that deaf students are extremely behind in criterion-referenced assessments. Most high school deaf children are assessed to be at a fourth grade reading level, but if you have a conversation with them in ASL they are extremely intelligent, they can have a full, intellectual, conversation with you. There are norm-referenced assessments within residential schools comparing deaf individuals to the other deaf students which are beneficial but when there is one deaf student in a mainstream hearing school, these assessments are not going to truly represent the students intelligence because of language barriers.