home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!uvaarpa!darwin.sura.net!paladin.american.edu!auvm!PLATO.DS.BOEING.COM!MITCH
- Message-ID: <9301252259.AA16106@plato.ds.boeing.com>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.deaf-l
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 14:59:50 PST
- Sender: DEAF LIST <DEAF-L@SIUCVMB.BITNET>
- From: Ronald Mitchell <mitch@PLATO.DS.BOEING.COM>
- Subject: Re: Teacher asks for help - again
- Lines: 95
-
- A good variety of useful insights and suggestions were offered in
- response to Cathy's call for help in dealing with the identity
- crisis of her young student. Cathy's immediate tactic was to talk
- it out in the classroom and I believe it was absolutely the best
- thing to do at the time. However, the crisis will recur. I'd
- like to offer the perspective of one having experienced similar
- feelings of negative self-worth and inadequacy beginning a year
- or so after becoming deaf at age eight and continuing through
- adolescence. I'll also throw in one possibly practical sugges-
- tion and a smidgen of possibly useful information.
-
- It seems to me this young man is in a bind. He is subject to
- myriad external influences promoting a negative self-image while
- being presented with role models who are super achievers. His
- crisis would have occurred in any case, but it was no coincidence
- that it was precipitated by a discussion of deaf "heros". We
- know that Cathy creates a very positive environment within the
- classroom but that's only a part of what her students experience.
- Recently, a deaf Deaf-Ler reported that hearing friends were as-
- tonished she could drive a car at all. A hearing contributer
- confessed to being surprised that deaf kids could ski. My hear-
- ing wife of several months is being asked "Can he drive a car?"
- After forty years and three million odd miles on the road I am
- amused by the question. But for an adolescent the impact of this
- negativism can be as devastating as it is pervasive.
-
- Psychologist Kenneth Clark made pioneering studies into the
- development of self concept in black ghetto children. Commenting
- on his findings he said:
-
- "As we collected and analyzed the data obtained thorugh the
- methods we used, we became impressed with the implications of the
- observations that in the initial stages of the emerging sense
- of self in children the substance and dynamics of the function-
- ing ego were determined almost entirely by external pres-
- sures, determinants and evaluative agents. These findings
- provided the first clues for insights concerning the fragility,
- vulnerability and dependence, indeed, the pathos of the human
- ego."
-
- He continues,
-
- "The qualitative effect of the external determainants of the in-
- dividuals sense of self is inevitably evaluative; that is, the
- resulting emerging self image inevitably brings with it a posi-
- tive or negative sense of worth of self. This positive or nega-
- tive evaluative component of self is inevitable and pivotal - and
- in its most primary and basic sense is not controlled by the in-
- dividual himself but by others over whom he has no control."
-
- Clark found it virtually impossible for a black child to develop
- a healthy self-image within a predominately white society.
- A deaf child surrounded by a hearing world that views deaf-
- ness negatively has a tough time. Cathy's student needs to know
- that he is fine the way he is. That a full and enjoyable
- life lies ahead without the necessity for heroic efforts. Suc-
- cess and happiness will not demand some extraordinary compen-
- sating talent such as the athlete skill of a major league base-
- ball player.
-
- Cathy is sensitive to the need for role models and is bringing
- deaf individuals into the class room as much as she can. One
- suggestion: if you are not already doing it, Cathy, why not sub-
- scribe to the deaf organization newsletters in your area.
- These informal community chronicles often contain personal ac-
- counts of ordinary experiences that can be quite amusing and
- may also offer insights as to how ordinary deaf people cope with
- the problems of deafness. These might serve as discussion to-
- pics for the class. I would be happy to send along a sampling of
- the newsletters from our area.
-
- That smidgen of information I have to offer is to that a motiva-
- tional program for visual and hearing-impaired persons has been
- developed by Ms. Peggy Casey of the Pacific Institute in Seattle.
- The program is called "Excellence in Sight and Sound" and deals
- with the problem of overcoming external conditioning to develop a
- healthy self image. Ms. Casey gives motivational seminars na-
- tionally and was inspired to adapt her material by the struggles
- of her two hearing-impaired daughters to confront their deafness
- as well as her own difficulty in accepting her daughters' deaf-
- ness. The program consists of teaching manuals and videos and is
- suitable for older adolescents and adults. More information is
- available from:
-
- Ms. Peggy Casey
- The Pacific Institute, Inc.
- 1201 Western Avenue
- Seattle, WA 98101
- 800-426-3660
-
-
- ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
- Ronald Mitchell /__// //__ / /\ // _
- Principal Engineer /__//__//__ _/_ / //__/
- mitch@plato.ds.boeing.com Defense & Space Group
-