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2002 |
Teacher
visits deaf school in Africa
Sarah Dempsey, American Sign
Language (ASL) teacher at Sisters High School returned recently from Malawi,
Africa.
The main purpose of her trip
was to visit her friend Heidi Corce, who teaches at Montford College in
Limbe, Malawi.
Montford College has a hearing
impaired program, where Heidi's job is to instruct teachers how to teach
deaf students. The college is located next to the School for the Deaf,
where students range in age from six to 21.
Most of the students who attend
are deaf due to malaria or meningitis.
Dempsey explained a little
about the deaf school.
"It's run by a Dutch man who
is an 'oralist'," she said. "He believes all students should speak orally,
so all the teaching at the deaf school is done orally.
"He hand-picks the kids he
wants to attend, who he feels have the capability to learn orally."
The sign language the deaf
students use is very different from American Sign Language. The people
there use their own particular sign language called "chichewa" which has
been passed down to them through minimial deaf culture they are exposed
to.
As a special welcome to the
school the deaf students performed some of their native tribal dances.
Throughout the course of the
second trimester pen pals had exchanged both letters and photos between
Sisters and Malawi. So, before Dempsey left for Malawi she gathered together
a gift basket to bring to the Malawi "pen pals." Many books and VHS movies
were donated from both students at Sisters High School as well as district
staff.
When the students were presented
with this gift, their first reaction was utter surprise.
"They were very excited and
then became curious, wanting to look through all the books and tried to
decide which movie to watch first," Dempsey said. "Even the older ones
wanted to watch the cartoon movie, 'Fern Gully.'"
Dempsey noted that most of
the poeple hire a watchman to guard their homes, gardens, and fruit trees
during the night to ensure against thievery. They also guard the kitchen
building, which is separate from the main house because of the heat and
smoke created from their cooking
Before coming home Sarah experienced
an African safari in Liwonde National Park. Because it was the wet season
she wasn't able to see the variety of animals she had hoped to see.
But what what she did see
impressed her.
"The hippos were just so much
bigger than I envisioned," she said.
"It's so different to see
the animals up close in the wild instead of in the zoo. And, I realized
that the lions that were just 10-15 feet away from us could really attack
if they wanted to!"
Dempsey also commented on
the warmth and kindness of the Malawi people while she was there.
"It didn't matter if I was
on the bus or walking down the street," she said. "People would stop and
offer to carry my bags, even if they had several of their own, and they
never expected or asked for a tip!
"I saw so many people with
so little," she said. "Many of the kids walked around without shoes. Overall,
the trip was a very humbling experience."
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