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{{See also|Hearing impairment|Deaf culture}}
To be '''deaf''' is to be unable to hear.
{{multiple issues|
This word is frequently used and understood in an audiological sense, expressing deafness as a disease; see [[Hearing impairment]].
{{more citations needed|date=March 2019}}
{{essay like|date=July 2024}}}}


The three '''models of deafness''' are rooted in either social or biological sciences. These are the ''cultural model, the social model, and the'' ''medical'' (or ''infirmity'') ''model''. The model through which the deaf person is viewed can impact how they are treated as well as their own self perception. In the cultural model, [[Deaf culture|the Deaf]] belong to a culture in which they are neither infirm nor disabled, but rather have their own fully grammatical and natural language.<ref name=":0">{{cite journal|vauthors=Young AM|date=November 1999|title=Hearing parents' adjustment to a deaf child-the impact of a cultural-linguistic model of deafness.|journal=Journal of Social Work Practice|volume=13|issue=2|pages=157–76|doi=10.1080/026505399103386|issn=0265-0533}}</ref> In the medical model, deafness is viewed undesirable, and it is to the advantage of the individual as well as society as a whole to "cure" this condition.<ref name="Power_2005">{{cite journal|vauthors=Power D|date=October 2005|title=Models of deafness: cochlear implants in the Australian daily press|journal=Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education|volume=10|issue=4|pages=451–9|doi=10.1093/deafed/eni042|pmid=16000690|doi-access=free|hdl=10072/4245|hdl-access=free}}</ref> The social model seeks to explain difficulties experienced by deaf individuals that are due to their environment.<ref name="Obasi_2008">{{cite journal|vauthors=Obasi C|date=October 2008|title=Seeing the deaf in "deafness"|journal=Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education|volume=13|issue=4|pages=455–65|doi=10.1093/deafed/enn008|pmid=18417464|doi-access=free}}</ref>
== Deaf subculture ==


== Cultural Model ==
The word also designates one who is a member of the Deaf community. (When used in this sense, the word is capitalized.)
{{See|Deaf culture|Deafhood}}
Being unable to hear is only a part of being Deaf.
Within the cultural model of deafness, Deaf people see themselves as a linguistic and cultural minority community rather than a "disability group".<ref name="Power_2005" /> Advocates of Deaf culture use a capital "D" to distinguish cultural Deafness from deafness as a pathology.<ref name="Jones_2002" />
To be fully included in the Deaf community, one must also know [[sign language]] and share some perspectives on, and adaptations to, deafness.
Although hearing people can participate in the Deaf community, their experiences tend to set them apart.


Deaf culture is distinct in that the inability to hear is not seen as a "loss" or something that negatively impacts an individual's quality of life. It is an asset of and for the Deaf community to be deaf in behavior, values, knowledge and fluency in sign language. The experience of the Deaf being a language minority is comparable to other minorities' native languages being important to group identification and the preservation of their culture.<ref name="Jones_2002" /> Deaf clubs (such as NAD- The National Association of the Deaf) and Deaf schools have played large roles in the preservation of sign language and Deaf culture.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Burch|first=Susan|date=October 2000|title=In a Different Voice: Sign Language Preservation and America's Deaf Community|journal=Bilingual Research Journal|volume=24|issue=4|pages=443–464|doi=10.1080/15235882.2000.10162777|s2cid=145505474|issn=1523-5882}}</ref> Residential schools for deaf children serve as a vital link in the transmission of the rich culture and language, seeing as they are ideal environments for children to acquire and master sign language and pass on Deaf cultural values.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=USowu0SkQVUC&q=residential&pg=PA73|title=Educational and Developmental Aspects of Deafness|last=Moores|first=Donald F.|date=1990|publisher=Gallaudet University Press|isbn=9780930323523}}</ref> Like all educational settings, these environments are key to providing deaf children valuable life lessons and skills that will help them prosper in any environment they may find themselves in.
Sign language is the central feature of Deafness.
All Deaf communities speak a sign language.
In some places, such as [[Marthas Vineyard]], groups of deaf people without a language have invented a sign language spontaneously.
Deaf people write in a spoken language, not in an orthography of their sign language (although writing systems have been developed for some sign languages). Various degrees of speaking and lip-reading ability are also found among Deaf people, for interacting with hearing people who do not understand sign language.


Rather than embrace the view that deafness is a "personal tragedy", the Deaf community contrasts the medical model of deafness by seeing all aspects of the deaf experience as positive. The birth of a deaf child is seen as a cause for celebration.<ref name="Obasi_2008" /> Deaf people point to the perspective on child rearing they share with hearing people. For example, hearing parents may feel that they relate to their hearing child because of their experience and intimate understanding of the hearing state of being. It follows that a Deaf parent will have easier experiences raising a deaf child since Deaf parents have an intimate understanding of the deaf state of being. Evidence of Deaf parental success is revealed in scholastic achievement. Deaf children who have Deaf parents that communicate in sign language from birth, generally perform better in their academics than other deaf children with hearing parents.<ref name="Marschark_2015">{{cite journal|vauthors=Marschark M, Shaver DM, Nagle KM, Newman LA|date=April 2015|title=Predicting the Academic Achievement of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Students From Individual, Household, Communication, and Educational Factors|journal=Exceptional Children|volume=81|issue=3|pages=350–369|doi=10.1177/0014402914563700|pmc=4634639|pmid=26549890}}</ref> This includes children who adapted using speech and [[lipreading]], prosthetic devices such as the [[cochlear implant]]s, [[hearing aid]] technology, and artificial language systems such as Signing Exact English and Cued Speech.<ref name="Marschark_2015" /> Deaf children acquiring sign languages from birth also reach language milestones at similar rates to their hearing counterparts, unlike deaf children born to hearing parents acquiring speech.<ref>{{cite journal|vauthors=Meier RP|date=1991|title=Language Acquisition by Deaf Children|journal=American Scientist|volume=79|issue=1|pages=60–70|bibcode=1991AmSci..79...60M|jstor=29774278}}</ref>
Most Deaf individuals use certain assistive devices in their daily lives.
In the U.S., Deaf individuals can communicate by telephone using a [[TDD|Telecommunications Device for the Deaf]] (TDD), also called a [[Telecommunications Device for the Deaf]] (TTY).
This device looks like a typewriter or word processor and transmits typed text over the telephone.
In the U.S., there is a telephone relay service so that a deaf person can communicate with a hearing person via a human translator.
Wireless and internet text messaging are beginning to take over the role of the TDD.
Other assistive devices include those that use flashing lights to signal events such as a ringing telephone, a doorbell, or a fire alarm.


Members of the Deaf community define deafness as a matter of culturally determined behaviors rather than an audiological factor.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Ruiz|first1=M. Teresa|last2=Munoz-Baell|first2=Irma M.|date=2000-01-01|title=Empowering the deaf. Let the deaf be deaf|url= |journal=Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health|volume=54|issue=1|pages=40–44|doi=10.1136/jech.54.1.40|issn=0143-005X|pmid=10692961|pmc=1731537}}</ref> Thus, those within the Deaf community tend to be, but are not limited to, deaf people, especially congenitally deaf people whose primary language is the [[sign language]] of their nation or community, as well as their hearing or deaf children (hearing children of Deaf adults are typically called CODAs: Child of Deaf adult), families, friends and other members of their social networks. This cultural model of deafness represents the natural evolution of the social networks of a minority language group. From the conceptual framework of the cultural model come implicit questions, such as: "How is deafness influenced by the physical and social environment in which it is embedded? What are the interdependent values, [[mores]], art forms, traditions, organizations, and language that characterize this culture?"
Deaf people do not look on deafness as a disability.
They consider deafness a positive trait, because it is tightly connected to other aspects of the Deaf subculture that are positive.
Deaf unity and community is strong.
The fact that deafness excludes Deaf people from some aspects of hearing culture and life reinforces cohesion within the community.
Many Deaf individuals wish for their children to be born Deaf.
Hearing people who do treat deafness as a disability are sometimes met with hostility.


== Attitudes toward deafness ==
== Social Model ==
{{Confusing section|hints that society has an obligation to make the environment better for the sake of the "disabled"|date=June 2011}}
{{See|Social model of disability}}The social model of deafness stems from the [[social model of disability]]. The concept of social disability was created by people who are disabled themselves, their families, friends, and associated social and political networks. Professionals in the [[human services]] fields and the [[social science]]s greatly contributed to the social model. This model describes a person's disability on the basis of two factors:


# the physical or mental traits that cause this disability
For much of time, deaf people were thought to be mentally retarded.
# their environment, as it is influenced by the perception of others.<ref name=":1">{{cite journal|vauthors=Samaha AM|date=2007|title=What good is the social model of disability|url=https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=13488&context=journal_articles|journal=University of Chicago Law Review|volume=74|issue=4|pages=1251–1308|doi=10.2307/20141862|jstor=20141862|s2cid=141304736|via=HeinOnline}}</ref>
This was not far from the truth as isolated deaf people rarely, if ever, learned language, which is fundamental to much of human thought.
[[Aristotle]] believed that the deaf were incapable of learning or thinking. The kind of prejudice based on speech and hearing that Aristotle has expressed has influenced methods of teaching the deaf.


Through this lens individuals who are deaf are considered disabled due to their inability to hear, which hearing counterparts in their surroundings have historically viewed as a disadvantage.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Salsgiver|first1=Richard O.|last2=Mackelprang|first2=Romel W.|date=1996-01-01|title=People with Disabilities and Social Work: Historical and Contemporary Issues|journal=Social Work|volume=41|issue=1|pages=7–14|doi=10.1093/sw/41.1.7|pmid=8560321|issn=0037-8046}}</ref> Deaf people may also have [[Deaf plus| other disabilities]]. People with disabilities affirm that the design of the environment often disables them. In more accessible environments where those that are deaf have access to language that is not only spoken they are disabled less, or not at all. Areas where hearing and deaf individuals interact, called contact zones, often leave deaf individuals at a disadvantage because of the environment being tailored to suit the needs of the hearing counterpart.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Bauman|first=H.-Dirksen L.|date=2005-07-01|title=Designing Deaf Babies and the Question of Disability|journal=The Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education|volume=10|issue=3|pages=311–315|doi=10.1093/deafed/eni031|pmid=15858071|issn=1081-4159|doi-access=free}}</ref> The history of Martha's Vineyard, when looking specifically at [[Martha's Vineyard Sign Language]], supports this notion. At one point in time, the deaf population on the island was so great that it was commonplace for hearing residents to know and use both signed and spoken language to communicate with their neighbors. In this environmental design, it was not "bad" or "disabling" if one was not able to hear in order to communicate. With certain disabilities, medical intervention can improve subsequent health issues. This is true to parts of the deaf population, as in some cases hearing can be gained with the assistance of medical technologies. The social model acknowledges the hard truth that medical intervention does not address societal issues that prevail - regardless of its extent or success.<ref name=":1" />
=== Oralism vs. Manualism ===


In addition to changing environments from disabling to enabling atmospheres, advocates of the social model support the complete integration of disabled people into society.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=de Zaldo|first=Garé Fábila|date=1999|title=The Social Integration of Individuals with Disabilities|journal=Bilingual Review / La Revista Bilingüe|volume=24|issue=1/2|pages=3–18|issn=0094-5366|jstor=25745645}}</ref> They encourage maximum integration with peers who are not disabled by their environment, especially, but not exclusively, in the school setting. Ultimately, the goal of proponents of the social model is to ensure all people are fully able to enjoy "all human rights and fundamental freedoms".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.un.org/development/desa/disabilities/convention-on-the-rights-of-persons-with-disabilities/preamble.html|title=Preamble {{!}} United Nations Enable|website=www.un.org|access-date=2019-04-11}}</ref> The social model of disability's ideology of "all-inclusive" school environments is not adhered to in the cultural model. Residential schools separate deaf and hard of hearing children from their hearing counterparts. The existence of these schools demonstrate an example of respecting and embracing the totality of the deaf experience rather than dismissing it. While the social model's promotion of inclusion at every level is a great principle, it may not always be the best environment in practice. In the case of deafness, there is a lot a child can miss in a mainstreamed schooling environment. In a poorly constructed mainstreamed environment, fostering relationships with classmates may be difficult and auditory important material shared verbally by teachers may be missed. As a result, the child may fall behind both academically and socially.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Nunes|first1=Terezinha|last2=Pretzlik|first2=Ursula|last3=Olsson|first3=Jenny|date=2001|title=Deaf children's social relationships in mainstream schools|journal=Deafness & Education International|volume=3|issue=3|pages=123–136|doi=10.1002/dei.106|issn=1557-069X}}</ref> In residential school settings, these challenges may not be experienced to the same degree, and would allow for deaf children's social and academic lives to instead flourish.
There are two opposing perspectives on how to teach language to deaf people:
one is that deaf students should be taught primarily in sign language (manualism), the other is that deaf students should be taught primarily (or exclusively) to speak and lip-read (oralism).
The rationale behind the latter method is that deaf people will have to interact with hearing people most of the time, so they must learn to communicate as hearing people do.
The rationale behind the former method is that sign language is a natural form of communication while lip-reading and speaking are extremely difficult for those who cannot hear.
Those who prefer the sign-language method take the approach that spoken language should be used only as an auxiliary language.
In practice, deaf people have been observed to learn and communicate much faster and more fluently when taught in sign language than when taught orally.


== Medical Model ==
In the U.S., the sign-language method was primarily used until 1880, when the second [[International Congress on the Education and Welfare of the Deaf]] (composed of 163 hearing and 1 deaf individuals) voted to use the oral approach to teach deaf students.
{{See|Medical model of disability|Hearing loss}}
Part of the reason for the emphasis on oralism was the [[melting pot]] ideology, that everyone should share the same culture and speak the same language.
The medical model of deafness originates from medical, social welfare and majority cultural notions of the absence of the ability to hear as being an illness or a physical [[disability]]. It stems from a more comprehensive and far-reaching [[medical model of disability]].<ref name="Power_2005" /> Under the perspective that deafness is an impairment, the inability to hear interferes with a person's ability to respond to environmental cues, to communicate, and to enjoy aspects of mainstream culture such as music.<ref name="Jones_2002">{{cite journal|last=Jones|first=Megan | name-list-style = vanc |date= April 2002 |title=Deafness as Culture: A Psychosocial Perspective|journal=Disability Studies Quarterly|volume=22|issue=2|doi=10.18061/dsq.v22i2.344 |url=http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/344|doi-access=free}}</ref> People who experience hearing loss after acquiring a mastery of spoken language as well as those who are hard-of-hearing commonly identify with this model.
Also, because sign language was not recognized as a true language, it seemed deficient as a method of communication.


Within the medical model deafness is conceptualized from a "personal tragedy" stance, indicating that it should be avoided, eradicated, or normalized by all possible means.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Swain|first1=John|last2=French|first2=Sally | name-list-style = vanc |date=2000-06-01|title=Towards an Affirmation Model of Disability |journal=Disability & Society |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=569–582 |doi= 10.1080/09687590050058189 |s2cid=144878150}}</ref> Often, the attitudes of professionals own assumptions of deafness as tragedy promote responses of loss; thus, hearing parents may experience diagnosis of their child's deafness as a tragedy with reactions of grief.<ref name=":0" /> Similarly, common reactions such as stress and anger are not necessarily understandable psychological responses to deafness, but may result from situations in which parents have not encountered in others an adequate response to their needs and questions.<ref name=":0" />
One of the major factors in changing public opinion was [[William Stokoe]]'s findings, published in [[1960]], that [[American Sign Language]] was a true language.
The findings were not immediately accepted, but they played a major role in shifting the emphasis of teaching back to the sign-language method.


While medical ethics and law dictate that it is up to the patient (or the patient's legal representative) to decide the treatments he or she wishes, the press and professional literature are increasingly normalizing the discussion regarding using cochlear implants, oral education, and mainstream placement;<ref name="Power_2005" /> all being popular choices under the medical model of deafness. The medical model suggests that, overall, the effects of deafness may be lessened through the use of technology such as hearing aids, cochlear implants, assistive listening devices, and lip reading.<ref name="Jones_2002" /> Similarly, doctors and scientists who engage in research are doing so simply because there is demand for information and for techniques which can restore hearing. The view that deafness is a "[[disability]]" also has economic consequences in political environments concerned with [[social welfare]]. It is the basis on which the governments in many developed countries provide financial support for the cost of [[cochlear implant]]s and other therapies.
A growing movement in deaf education today is called bi-bi, which stands for bilingualism/biculturalism.
This method aims to both respect and foster Deaf cultural identity and sign language competence and to teach and encourage skills required to function in the dominant hearing culture.


Under the medical model of deafness, implicit questions may naturally arise, such as: "By what criteria and by whom is the impairment construed as an infirmity; how did the infirmity arise; what are the risks and benefits of the available treatment, if any; what can be done to minimize the disabling effects of the infirmity?"
The perception and education of Deaf people as a culture were revolutionized by the student strikes at [[Gallaudet University]] starting [[March 9]], [[1988]]. Deaf students were outraged at the selection of another in a line of university presidents who were hearing, finding it patronizing, marginalizing, and inappropriate for such an essential part of the Deaf community.
In less than a week of activism, the president-elect, who had also been criticized for malapropos statements about the functionality of Deaf people, resigned and a Deaf president replaced her.


==Resources:==
== See also ==
* [[Deaf culture]]
There are many different [[assistive technologies]] available to people who are deaf, hearing impaired or hard of hearing. There are also [[Hearing dog]]s which are a category of [[Assistance dog]]s.
* [[Gallaudet University]] – school for advanced education of the deaf and hard-of-hearing
* [[Hard-of-hearing]]
* [[Medical model of disability]]
* [[Social model of disability]]
* [[Models of disability]]


==External Links==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1993/deaf.htm ESL Literacy for a Linguistic Minority: The Deaf Experience. ERIC Digest.]

== Further reading ==
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Bienvenu MJ, Colonomos B | date = 1989 | title = An Introduction to American Deaf Culture | series = videotape series | publisher = Sign Media, Inc. }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = D'Andrade R | date = 1984 | chapter = Cultural meaning systems | veditors = Shweder R, Levine RA | title = Culture Theory | pages = 88–122 | location = New York | publisher = Cambridge University Press }}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Gelb SA | title = Social deviance and the 'discovery'of the moron. | journal = Disability, Handicap & Society | date = January 1987 | volume = 2 | issue = 3 | pages = 247–58 | doi = 10.1080/02674648766780311 }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Groce NE | date = 1985 | chapter = The island adaptation to deafness | title = Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language | url = https://archive.org/details/everyoneherespok00groc_0 | url-access = registration | page = [https://archive.org/details/everyoneherespok00groc_0/page/50 50] | publisher = Harvard University Press | isbn = 9780674270404 }}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Gerber DA | date = 1990 | title = Listening to Disabled People: The Problem of Voice and Authority in Robert B. Edgerton's the Cloak of Competence | journal = Disability, Handicap & Society | volume = 5 | pages = 3–23 | doi = 10.1080/02674649066780011 }}
* {{cite journal | vauthors = Heyman B, Bell B, Kingham MR, Handyside EC | title = Social class and the prevalence of handicapping conditions. | journal = Disability, Handicap & Society | date = January 1990 | volume = 5 | issue = 2 | pages = 167–84 | doi = 10.1080/02674649066780161 }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Lane H | date = 1999 | title = The Infirmity and Cultural Models of Deaf People, in The Mask of Benevolence | pages = 13–28 | publisher = Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Vintage Books | edition = 2nd }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Rutherford S | date = 1986 | title = The Deaf Perspective | series = videotape | publisher = Sign Media. Inc. }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Schein J | date = 1987 | chapter = The demography of deafness | veditors = Higgins FC, Nash JE| title = Understanding Deafness Socially | location = Springfield, IL }}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Schein J | date = 1989 | title = At Home Among Strangers | url = https://archive.org/details/athomeamongstran00sche | url-access = registration | location = Washington, DC | publisher = Gallaudet University Press | page = [https://archive.org/details/athomeamongstran00sche/page/106 106] | isbn = 9780930323516 }}
{{refend}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1998-2/inclusion.htm Educating Children Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing: Inclusion. ERIC Digest]
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1998-2/inclusion.htm Educating Children Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing: Inclusion. ERIC Digest]
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/1993/deaf.htm ESL Literacy for a Linguistic Minority: The Deaf Experience. ERIC Digest.]


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Latest revision as of 08:04, 15 September 2024

The three models of deafness are rooted in either social or biological sciences. These are the cultural model, the social model, and the medical (or infirmity) model. The model through which the deaf person is viewed can impact how they are treated as well as their own self perception. In the cultural model, the Deaf belong to a culture in which they are neither infirm nor disabled, but rather have their own fully grammatical and natural language.[1] In the medical model, deafness is viewed undesirable, and it is to the advantage of the individual as well as society as a whole to "cure" this condition.[2] The social model seeks to explain difficulties experienced by deaf individuals that are due to their environment.[3]

Cultural Model

[edit]

Within the cultural model of deafness, Deaf people see themselves as a linguistic and cultural minority community rather than a "disability group".[2] Advocates of Deaf culture use a capital "D" to distinguish cultural Deafness from deafness as a pathology.[4]

Deaf culture is distinct in that the inability to hear is not seen as a "loss" or something that negatively impacts an individual's quality of life. It is an asset of and for the Deaf community to be deaf in behavior, values, knowledge and fluency in sign language. The experience of the Deaf being a language minority is comparable to other minorities' native languages being important to group identification and the preservation of their culture.[4] Deaf clubs (such as NAD- The National Association of the Deaf) and Deaf schools have played large roles in the preservation of sign language and Deaf culture.[5] Residential schools for deaf children serve as a vital link in the transmission of the rich culture and language, seeing as they are ideal environments for children to acquire and master sign language and pass on Deaf cultural values.[6] Like all educational settings, these environments are key to providing deaf children valuable life lessons and skills that will help them prosper in any environment they may find themselves in.

Rather than embrace the view that deafness is a "personal tragedy", the Deaf community contrasts the medical model of deafness by seeing all aspects of the deaf experience as positive. The birth of a deaf child is seen as a cause for celebration.[3] Deaf people point to the perspective on child rearing they share with hearing people. For example, hearing parents may feel that they relate to their hearing child because of their experience and intimate understanding of the hearing state of being. It follows that a Deaf parent will have easier experiences raising a deaf child since Deaf parents have an intimate understanding of the deaf state of being. Evidence of Deaf parental success is revealed in scholastic achievement. Deaf children who have Deaf parents that communicate in sign language from birth, generally perform better in their academics than other deaf children with hearing parents.[7] This includes children who adapted using speech and lipreading, prosthetic devices such as the cochlear implants, hearing aid technology, and artificial language systems such as Signing Exact English and Cued Speech.[7] Deaf children acquiring sign languages from birth also reach language milestones at similar rates to their hearing counterparts, unlike deaf children born to hearing parents acquiring speech.[8]

Members of the Deaf community define deafness as a matter of culturally determined behaviors rather than an audiological factor.[9] Thus, those within the Deaf community tend to be, but are not limited to, deaf people, especially congenitally deaf people whose primary language is the sign language of their nation or community, as well as their hearing or deaf children (hearing children of Deaf adults are typically called CODAs: Child of Deaf adult), families, friends and other members of their social networks. This cultural model of deafness represents the natural evolution of the social networks of a minority language group. From the conceptual framework of the cultural model come implicit questions, such as: "How is deafness influenced by the physical and social environment in which it is embedded? What are the interdependent values, mores, art forms, traditions, organizations, and language that characterize this culture?"

Social Model

[edit]

The social model of deafness stems from the social model of disability. The concept of social disability was created by people who are disabled themselves, their families, friends, and associated social and political networks. Professionals in the human services fields and the social sciences greatly contributed to the social model. This model describes a person's disability on the basis of two factors:

  1. the physical or mental traits that cause this disability
  2. their environment, as it is influenced by the perception of others.[10]

Through this lens individuals who are deaf are considered disabled due to their inability to hear, which hearing counterparts in their surroundings have historically viewed as a disadvantage.[11] Deaf people may also have other disabilities. People with disabilities affirm that the design of the environment often disables them. In more accessible environments where those that are deaf have access to language that is not only spoken they are disabled less, or not at all. Areas where hearing and deaf individuals interact, called contact zones, often leave deaf individuals at a disadvantage because of the environment being tailored to suit the needs of the hearing counterpart.[12] The history of Martha's Vineyard, when looking specifically at Martha's Vineyard Sign Language, supports this notion. At one point in time, the deaf population on the island was so great that it was commonplace for hearing residents to know and use both signed and spoken language to communicate with their neighbors. In this environmental design, it was not "bad" or "disabling" if one was not able to hear in order to communicate. With certain disabilities, medical intervention can improve subsequent health issues. This is true to parts of the deaf population, as in some cases hearing can be gained with the assistance of medical technologies. The social model acknowledges the hard truth that medical intervention does not address societal issues that prevail - regardless of its extent or success.[10]

In addition to changing environments from disabling to enabling atmospheres, advocates of the social model support the complete integration of disabled people into society.[13] They encourage maximum integration with peers who are not disabled by their environment, especially, but not exclusively, in the school setting. Ultimately, the goal of proponents of the social model is to ensure all people are fully able to enjoy "all human rights and fundamental freedoms".[14] The social model of disability's ideology of "all-inclusive" school environments is not adhered to in the cultural model. Residential schools separate deaf and hard of hearing children from their hearing counterparts. The existence of these schools demonstrate an example of respecting and embracing the totality of the deaf experience rather than dismissing it. While the social model's promotion of inclusion at every level is a great principle, it may not always be the best environment in practice. In the case of deafness, there is a lot a child can miss in a mainstreamed schooling environment. In a poorly constructed mainstreamed environment, fostering relationships with classmates may be difficult and auditory important material shared verbally by teachers may be missed. As a result, the child may fall behind both academically and socially.[15] In residential school settings, these challenges may not be experienced to the same degree, and would allow for deaf children's social and academic lives to instead flourish.

Medical Model

[edit]

The medical model of deafness originates from medical, social welfare and majority cultural notions of the absence of the ability to hear as being an illness or a physical disability. It stems from a more comprehensive and far-reaching medical model of disability.[2] Under the perspective that deafness is an impairment, the inability to hear interferes with a person's ability to respond to environmental cues, to communicate, and to enjoy aspects of mainstream culture such as music.[4] People who experience hearing loss after acquiring a mastery of spoken language as well as those who are hard-of-hearing commonly identify with this model.

Within the medical model deafness is conceptualized from a "personal tragedy" stance, indicating that it should be avoided, eradicated, or normalized by all possible means.[16] Often, the attitudes of professionals own assumptions of deafness as tragedy promote responses of loss; thus, hearing parents may experience diagnosis of their child's deafness as a tragedy with reactions of grief.[1] Similarly, common reactions such as stress and anger are not necessarily understandable psychological responses to deafness, but may result from situations in which parents have not encountered in others an adequate response to their needs and questions.[1]

While medical ethics and law dictate that it is up to the patient (or the patient's legal representative) to decide the treatments he or she wishes, the press and professional literature are increasingly normalizing the discussion regarding using cochlear implants, oral education, and mainstream placement;[2] all being popular choices under the medical model of deafness. The medical model suggests that, overall, the effects of deafness may be lessened through the use of technology such as hearing aids, cochlear implants, assistive listening devices, and lip reading.[4] Similarly, doctors and scientists who engage in research are doing so simply because there is demand for information and for techniques which can restore hearing. The view that deafness is a "disability" also has economic consequences in political environments concerned with social welfare. It is the basis on which the governments in many developed countries provide financial support for the cost of cochlear implants and other therapies.

Under the medical model of deafness, implicit questions may naturally arise, such as: "By what criteria and by whom is the impairment construed as an infirmity; how did the infirmity arise; what are the risks and benefits of the available treatment, if any; what can be done to minimize the disabling effects of the infirmity?"

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Young AM (November 1999). "Hearing parents' adjustment to a deaf child-the impact of a cultural-linguistic model of deafness". Journal of Social Work Practice. 13 (2): 157–76. doi:10.1080/026505399103386. ISSN 0265-0533.
  2. ^ a b c d Power D (October 2005). "Models of deafness: cochlear implants in the Australian daily press". Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education. 10 (4): 451–9. doi:10.1093/deafed/eni042. hdl:10072/4245. PMID 16000690.
  3. ^ a b Obasi C (October 2008). "Seeing the deaf in "deafness"". Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education. 13 (4): 455–65. doi:10.1093/deafed/enn008. PMID 18417464.
  4. ^ a b c d Jones M (April 2002). "Deafness as Culture: A Psychosocial Perspective". Disability Studies Quarterly. 22 (2). doi:10.18061/dsq.v22i2.344.
  5. ^ Burch, Susan (October 2000). "In a Different Voice: Sign Language Preservation and America's Deaf Community". Bilingual Research Journal. 24 (4): 443–464. doi:10.1080/15235882.2000.10162777. ISSN 1523-5882. S2CID 145505474.
  6. ^ Moores, Donald F. (1990). Educational and Developmental Aspects of Deafness. Gallaudet University Press. ISBN 9780930323523.
  7. ^ a b Marschark M, Shaver DM, Nagle KM, Newman LA (April 2015). "Predicting the Academic Achievement of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Students From Individual, Household, Communication, and Educational Factors". Exceptional Children. 81 (3): 350–369. doi:10.1177/0014402914563700. PMC 4634639. PMID 26549890.
  8. ^ Meier RP (1991). "Language Acquisition by Deaf Children". American Scientist. 79 (1): 60–70. Bibcode:1991AmSci..79...60M. JSTOR 29774278.
  9. ^ Ruiz, M. Teresa; Munoz-Baell, Irma M. (2000-01-01). "Empowering the deaf. Let the deaf be deaf". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 54 (1): 40–44. doi:10.1136/jech.54.1.40. ISSN 0143-005X. PMC 1731537. PMID 10692961.
  10. ^ a b Samaha AM (2007). "What good is the social model of disability". University of Chicago Law Review. 74 (4): 1251–1308. doi:10.2307/20141862. JSTOR 20141862. S2CID 141304736 – via HeinOnline.
  11. ^ Salsgiver, Richard O.; Mackelprang, Romel W. (1996-01-01). "People with Disabilities and Social Work: Historical and Contemporary Issues". Social Work. 41 (1): 7–14. doi:10.1093/sw/41.1.7. ISSN 0037-8046. PMID 8560321.
  12. ^ Bauman, H.-Dirksen L. (2005-07-01). "Designing Deaf Babies and the Question of Disability". The Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education. 10 (3): 311–315. doi:10.1093/deafed/eni031. ISSN 1081-4159. PMID 15858071.
  13. ^ de Zaldo, Garé Fábila (1999). "The Social Integration of Individuals with Disabilities". Bilingual Review / La Revista Bilingüe. 24 (1/2): 3–18. ISSN 0094-5366. JSTOR 25745645.
  14. ^ "Preamble | United Nations Enable". www.un.org. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  15. ^ Nunes, Terezinha; Pretzlik, Ursula; Olsson, Jenny (2001). "Deaf children's social relationships in mainstream schools". Deafness & Education International. 3 (3): 123–136. doi:10.1002/dei.106. ISSN 1557-069X.
  16. ^ Swain J, French S (2000-06-01). "Towards an Affirmation Model of Disability". Disability & Society. 15 (4): 569–582. doi:10.1080/09687590050058189. S2CID 144878150.

Further reading

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  • Bienvenu MJ, Colonomos B (1989). An Introduction to American Deaf Culture. videotape series. Sign Media, Inc.
  • D'Andrade R (1984). "Cultural meaning systems". In Shweder R, Levine RA (eds.). Culture Theory. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 88–122.
  • Gelb SA (January 1987). "Social deviance and the 'discovery'of the moron". Disability, Handicap & Society. 2 (3): 247–58. doi:10.1080/02674648766780311.
  • Groce NE (1985). "The island adaptation to deafness". Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language. Harvard University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780674270404.
  • Gerber DA (1990). "Listening to Disabled People: The Problem of Voice and Authority in Robert B. Edgerton's the Cloak of Competence". Disability, Handicap & Society. 5: 3–23. doi:10.1080/02674649066780011.
  • Heyman B, Bell B, Kingham MR, Handyside EC (January 1990). "Social class and the prevalence of handicapping conditions". Disability, Handicap & Society. 5 (2): 167–84. doi:10.1080/02674649066780161.
  • Lane H (1999). The Infirmity and Cultural Models of Deaf People, in The Mask of Benevolence (2nd ed.). Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Vintage Books. pp. 13–28.
  • Rutherford S (1986). The Deaf Perspective. videotape. Sign Media. Inc.
  • Schein J (1987). "The demography of deafness". In Higgins FC, Nash JE (eds.). Understanding Deafness Socially. Springfield, IL.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Schein J (1989). At Home Among Strangers. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press. p. 106. ISBN 9780930323516.
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