• UNIT: 11 INTRODUCTION TO RWANDAN SIGN LANGUAGE AND DEAF EDUCATION

    Key Unit Competence: Use Rwandan Sign Language as alternative
                                                     communication used by learners with

                                                      hearing difficulties.

    Introductory Activity
    Use of Rwandan Sign Language as alternative communication used by
    learners with hearing difficulties.

    Read the following text and answer the questions that follow:

    Sign language (also known as signed language) is a language that
    uses the visual-manual modality to convey meaning. Sign language is
    expressed through manual articulations in combination with non-manual
    elements. Sign language is a full-fledged natural language with its own
    grammar and lexicon. Sign language is not universal and not mutually
    intelligible with each other, although there are also striking similarities
    among sign languages.

    Linguists consider both spoken and signed communication to be types

    of natural language, meaning that both emerged through an abstract,
    protracted aging process and evolved over time without meticulous
    planning. Sign language should not be confused with body language, a
    type of non-verbal communication.

    Wherever communities of deaf people exist, sign languages have

    developed as handy means of communication and they form the core of
    local deaf cultures. Although signing is used primarily by the deaf and hard
    of hearing, it is also used by hearing individuals, such as those unable to
    physically speak, those who have trouble with spoken language due to
    a condition (augmentative and alternative communication), or those with
    deaf family members.

    It is unclear how many Sign Languages currently exist worldwide. Each

    country generally has its own native sign language, and some have
    more than one. Some Sign Languages have obtained some form of legal

    recognition, while others have no status at all.

    Questions:
    1. Describe Sign Language as a medium of communication.
    2. Linguists consider both spoken and signed communication to be
    types of natural language. What does this mean to you?
    3. Wherever communities of deaf people exist, sign languages have
    developed as handy means of communication and they form the
    core of local deaf cultures. Discuss.
    4. The way to educate deaf student is the same way to use when

    educating students with hearing impairments. Discuss.

    11.1. History of Sign Language in Africa and in Rwanda
    (Andrew Foster)

    Activity 11.1.
    Use books or other sources of information to answer the following
    questions:
    1. What do you understand by Sign Language?
    2. What is deaf education?.
    3. What do you think is the best way to teach Deaf student?

    a. Brief history of Sign Languages in Africa, in Rwanda and Deaf

    Education
    Sign Language is a system of communication using visual gestures and
    signs, as used by deaf people. Sign languages arise almost anywhere there
    are deaf people. By definition, deaf people cannot hear, but most have
    an intact capacity for language, and language will out one way or another.
    While there are a few documented instances where sign languages have
    been invented, their emergence is generally spontaneous. When there is a
    critical mass of deaf people, as often occurs at school, the emergence of a
    fully developed sign language can be extremely rapid.

    Sign languages are relatively young. The earliest systematic description of a

    sign language occurs in the late eighteenth century, when L’Abbé de l’Épée

    founded the first school for the deaf that used sign language. L’Épée took

    signs that already existed in Paris and added what he called ‘methodical
    signs’ for use as both metalinguistic devices and ways of tying the signing
    to French grammar. The founder of the first school for the deaf in the
    United States, Edward Miner Gallaudet, visited L’Épée’s school and hired
    its star pupil, Laurent Clerc, to come and teach at his school in Hartford,
    Connecticut. Children from Martha’s Vineyard, where a descendant of British
    Sign Language was used, attended the school and had some influence over
    the development of American Sign Language.

    The History of Sign Languages in Africa is associated to Dr. Andrew J.

    Foster. Andrew Foster was intelligent, talented and dedicated to bringing
    deaf education to so many, he was the first African American to graduate
    from Gallaudet with a Bachelor of Arts Degree. Foster has been referred to
    as the father of Sign Languages in Africa because he established 32 schools
    for the deaf in 13 different African countries.

    Andrew Foster and his brother contracted spinal meningitis at 11 years

    old and became deaf. At that time, African Americans were only formally
    educated through the sixth grade. He attended several different schools
    for the deaf until finally receiving his high school diploma at the age of
    26. Because he was African American, Foster tried repeatedly to get into
    Gallaudet but was denied admittance due to his race. Never one to give
    up on something he set his mind to; he was finally accepted into Gallaudet

    with a full scholarship in 1951. Foster continued with his education after

    graduating from Gallaudet, earning two master degrees before focusing on
    his true life’s calling “missionary work”
    With the help and encouragement of then Gallaudet President, Leonard
    Elstad, Foster established what is now known as the Christian Mission for
    the Deaf in Detroit (1956). He then went on speaking tours across the globe
    and to 25 different African countries in an effort to raise funds for schools for
    the deaf in Africa. When Foster first arrived in Africa in 1957, there were 12
    schools for the deaf in Northern Africa and in Apartheid South Africa. He set
    up his first school in Western Africa in Ghana of that same year and by 1972,
    he had established another 29 schools for the deaf all over Africa.

    Dr. Andrew Foster taught students, trained teachers, educated the public

    about the needs of deaf Africans, and advised government officials about
    the need for more schools for the deaf. Gallaudet also educated many of
    Foster’s former African students. In 2004, Gallaudet University named an
    auditorium after him in honor of his role as the “Father of Deaf Education” in

    Africa.

    d

    In Rwanda, the history of special education can be traced back in the year
    1962 when Father Joseph Fraipont Ndagijimana opened the first centre for
    medical, education and reintegration of persons with Disabilities in Gatagara.
    The school received children with varying disabilities including those with
    hearing impairments. The Rwandan National Union of the Deaf (RNUD)
    was then established in 1989 and leads to advocate for the recognition
    of Rwandan Sign Language as an official language. They are currently
    developing a Rwandan Sign Language dictionary.

    Deaf education
    is the education of students with any degree of hearing loss
    or deafness which addresses their differences and individual needs. This
    process involves individually-planned, systematically-monitored teaching
    methods, adaptive materials, accessible settings and other interventions
    designed to help students achieve a higher level of self-sufficiency and
    success in the school and community than they would achieve with a typical
    classroom education. A number of countries focus on training teachers to
    teach deaf students with a variety of approaches and have organizations to
    aid deaf students.

    Deaf history greatly affects how deaf people live their lives today. And not

    only do deaf people have a history, they have a culture. Deaf culture is
    culture like any other. Deaf people share a language, rules for behavior,
    values, and traditions. The way the Deaf culture is living today is a direct
    result of the Deaf history that preceded it. The Deaf culture is a culture that

    is centered on sign language and relationships among one another.

    b. Deaf community and deaf culture
    In Rwanda, like in many other African countries, children with hearing
    impairments encounter challenges as regard to education. Social culture
    barriers are hindering their participation to education and therefore have no
    chance to live a meaingful life.

    According to the World Federation of the Deaf: “Language and culture are

    inseparable, and sign language(s) are a critical component of deaf culture
    and the deaf identity. Sign language is vital to every deaf person’s cognitive,
    social, emotional, and linguistic growth. Without early sign language
    exposure, deaf children are deprived of a strong language foundation.”

    With a grant from the Disability Rights Advocacy Fund (DRAF), the Rwandan

    National Union of the Deaf (RNUD) leads a coalition with Media for Deaf
    Rwanda and the Human Rights First Rwanda Association to advocate for
    the recognition of Rwandan Sign Language as an official language. They are
    also developing a Rwandan Sign Language dictionary.

    • What is the Deaf Community?

    Some people with profound hearing loss embrace their deafness as part
    of their cultural identity, and sometimes captalize the “d” in Deaf. Some
    members of the community do not consider themselves disabled and feel
    that they don’t need to be “fixed” by doctors through medical interventions
    such as cochlear implants. Instead, they see themselves as a part of a unique
    linguistic group with a distinct culture. Deaf people prefer to be called deaf,
    and dislike the term “hearing-impaired,” according to several deaf groups and
    agencies such as the National Association of the Deaf, The term “hearing
    impaired” is vague and tends to lump diverse groups such as the hard of
    hearing, late-deafened, and deaf into one category. The Deaf also dislike the
    “impaired” label, since deaf people do not consider themselves deficient or
    disabled in any way. The nature of sign language has created some unique
    cultural norms. For example, when deaf people sign to each other, they
    stand further apart than hearing people would during a conversation. It is
    difficult to go around deaf people signing to each other in narrow places like
    hallways, so it is not usually a big deal if a person walks quickly between
    two signing people. The person needs to go through fast enough so that the
    Deaf people don’t miss any signs. Interrupting the conversation by saying
    “excuse me” before going through two signing people may be considered
    rude in the deaf community.

    Hearing people tend to let their eyes rove during conversations.
    In deaf
    culture,
    constant eye contact is essential for communication. Deaf people
    feel that breaking eye contact is rude.

    Many members of the community consider sign as their first language and

    prefer to communicate with hearing people via a sign language interpreter.
    Interpreters are highly-trained professionals who can assist either in person
    or through a video relay service (VRS) or remote interpreting services (VRI).
    VRS services help hearing and deaf people to communicate by phone
    through a sign language interpreter who is seen on a computer screen or on
    a videophone. VRI interpreters can serve from another location via a video
    camera. The hearing person, and the deaf person can be broadcast live onto
    a screen to watch each other communicate.
    • Attention-Getting Behaviors
    Deaf people have developed various ways of getting people’s attention in
    their silent world, such as:
    • A gentle touch - usually a tap on a shoulder
    • Handwaves
    • Vibration, such as a foot stomping or a knock on a table
    • Turning a light-switch on and off
    • Adapting to Activities of Everyday Living
    Because Deaf people communicate visually with their hands, they adapt to
    daily life in unique ways. For example, a Deaf driver may wait until traffic
    stops to sign to a passenger or will sign to him briefly with one hand. They
    may chose to sign with one hand during meals or when they are holding
    something. At a performance, Deaf people may show their appreciation by
    raising their hands and twisting them in the air instead of clapping. The deaf
    community is extremely close-knit and ending a visit can be difficult. A «Deaf
    goodbye» is notorious for being long, with people saying bye numerous
    times and then continuing to talk.

    SELF Assessment 11.1

    1. Who is the father of Sign Language in Africa?
    2. Deaf people have their own culture. Explain?
    3. Briefly explain the contribution of Andrew J. Foster to the

    development of Sign languages in Africa?

    11.2. Rules of Rwandan Sign Language
    Activity 11.2

    1. How would you behave if you are to communicate with a Deaf
    person?
    A Deaf person is someone who has difficulties in hearing. The following are
    rules to consider when teaching or communicating with a Deaf person :
    • Maintain eye contact when talking to the person or learner with hearing
    difficulties.
    • Always face the source of light for visibility.
    • Do not talk while the face is turned away.
    • Keep your face at the same level with the learner.
    • Don’t be more than 2 meters away from the learner.
    • Do not cover your mouth while speaking.
    • Speak naturally without exaggerating lip movement .
    • Remember that sign language grammar is different from spoken
    language grammar.

    SELF Assessment 11.2

    1. List five rules to consider when you are communicating with deaf
    person?

    11.3. Basic Rwandan Sign Language

    Activity 11.3

    1. Imagine you are with a deaf person and you want to say good bye.
    What sign would you use?
    2. Suppose you get an accident and become deaf, how would you
    tell your parent that you want to eat?
    3. Deaf people use body parts to communicate. What is the mostly

    used body part?

    11.3.1 Sign Language Alphabet and the basics of Sign Language
    Learning to sign the alphabet (known as the manual alphabet) is usually
    the first place to begin. Each of the 26 letters in the English alphabet are
    represented with a unique sign relatively easy to understand and some even
    mimic the shape of the letter they represent as shown here below. Practice
    these and commit them to memory and you will have a good foundation for
    signing.

    Rwandan finger spelling alphabet.

    5

    • Five basic ways for signing
    1. Handshape
    2. Movement
    3. Palm direction
    4. Location
    5. Facial expression
    • The ways to learn sign language:
    –– Take a sign language class
    –– Learn online by watching videos
    –– Join a sign language group, deaf club
    –– Hire a private, qualified sign language tutor
    –– Watch and mimic interpreters
    • Position to take when signing
    When communicate with Deaf person you must take position in front of him/
    her, face to face. It is good to stand and when using arms, they must be at

    the position of your chest.

    f

    While doing fingerspell the palm of your hand must be facing the audience.
    This instruction is mandatory to avoid the confusion from numbers.

    E.g.: If you fingerspell letter F your palm must be facing the follower, otherwise
    if it is facing the user it will mean number 3.

    There are several letter that can become member when you change the

    position of your palm.
    e.g. :

    • Table of basic Sign Language and their meanings

    q

    s

    w

    z

    w

    w

    s

    r

    3

    d

    e

    e

    d

    11.3.2. Structure of Sentences in Sign language.

    In Sign Language, you can choose to assemble the words in your sentence in
    different orders,
    depending on the content of your dialogue. Some sentences
    should be signed in a natural English order because rearranging them would
    causes confusion. However, most of the time, you can get your point across
    in a variety of ways without worrying about the word order. Unlike English
    grammar rules, which dictate that the subject must go before the verb, Sign
    allows you to put the subject before or after the verb when dealing with
    simple sentences; it doesn’t matter which word comes first.You can sign
    either in subject-verb or verb-subject order. Here are some examples:
    English: He sells

    Sign: HE SELLS

    e

    English: I eat.

    Sign: ME EAT

    e

    Self Assessment 11.3
    1. Is the sign language used only by the deaf people?
    2. Fingerspelling the following words:
    • Chidren,
    • Sister,
    • To write
    3. Sign the following words:
    • Name
    • Book
    • To learn

    4. Fingerspelling any 5 letters of your choice.

    END UNIT ASSESSMENT
    1. Write down any 2 characteristics of the Deaf community.
    2. What are the signs of these words : -Love, who, Jesus, Big, Family
    3. Sign the following sentences then Change them into Sign
    Language :
    • I eat.
    • He sells.
    4. Who is the father of Sign Language?
    5. Write down 4 rules to consider when using Rwandan Sign
    Language?
    6. Is Sign language only used by the Deaf people ?

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    UNIT: 10 INTRODUCTION TO BRAILLE AND TACTILE MATERIALSTopic 12