Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Guidlines for Deaf Schools by FSSA

Guidelines for Deaf Schools
Written by FSSA Editorial Team
Wednesday, 10 May 2006
Working at a Deaf school? Children interested into the protest? Here are some ideas and topics of discussion that can be related to the Gallaudet protest and the updates that come.

• Ways to peacefully disagree
• First amendment
• Fairness
• Respect
• What is an Ally?
• What mean to take responsibility?

Quotes to discuss

• "Peace is not the absence of conflict but the presence of Justice" Martin Luther King Jr.
• "Violence is anything that denies human integrity, and leads to hopelessness and helplessness." Martin Luther King Jr.

Activity ideas

• Create a mural of your diverse community
• Poetry writing about social justice, community, self
• Role playing conflict resolution and peaceful disagreements
• Create signs and posters for a rally about first amendment rights
• Create a commercial about freedom of speech, first amendment, diversity, what is deaf, how to voice your opinion
• Develop a collective text (all write together)
• Collage
• Develop a Bill of Rights
• Create a comic strip
• Analyze a piece of literature or text from class for racial, class, social bias and or stereotypes
• Review the Deaf Child's Bill of Rights (www.nad.org/deafchildrights) what would you change, what do you agree with? How would you revise it? If you agree with it how could you work to get it recognized in your area?
• Organize a "Day of Respect" at your school,
• Brainstorm ways to show respect
• Make a class "I Am" book (see Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Campoy's book Authors in the Classroom)
• Draw a picture of, tell a story about or write a description of someone who is a strong ally.
• Create a story or book about "how it is and how it could be"

Resources
www.rethinkingschools.com
• Ada, A. F. and Campoy, F. I. (2004). Authors in the Classroom: A Transformative Education Process. Boston: Pearson publishers (www.ablongman.com )

Children's books for discussion

• Swimmy by Leo Lionni• The Red Comb by Fernando Pico
• The Streets are Free by Kurusa

5 Comments:

At 9/20/2006 01:37:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I was struck by the following phrases written by Larry Forestal of Wisconsin representing the NAD re: Gallaudet's current crisis. They are "how to make the University Board of Trustees more responsive and representative" and "the evaluation of the University Board structure and composition to be better reflective of true Deaf America.” I recognize the power and potential of the RSD Board to address and implement educational reform focused on providing a first-rate education that is accessible to all students attending RSD.

Pamela R. Conley

 
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At 4/22/2010 02:40:00 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

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At 4/22/2010 02:41:00 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

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