University of Rochester
[NEWS AND FACTS BANNER]
NEWS AND FACTS

Skip Navigation Bar
September 27
1999

Contents

Previous article

Next article

In Brief

Calendar

Classifieds

Jobs

Currents home

Mail


Phone BookContact the UniversitySearch/IndexNews and Facts
 
Currents--University of Rochester newspaper

ASL grads return to enlighten students

What career and study opportunities are open to students in the University's new American Sign Language major? Several alumni of the program returned to campus to talk about their own experiences in a panel discussion on September 24.

Six Rochester graduates talked about their post-graduate projects and work: Sarah Krupnick '96, who went on to complete the interpreting training program at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at Rochester Institute of Technology; Sue Mantel '98, a graduate student in deaf education at Boston University; Eve Davidi '99, a graduate student in speech pathology at McGill University; Patrick Freivald '98 and Joanna Brown '98, who are in the Master of Science secondary education program at NTID; and Jessica Vasquez '99.

The University first offered ASL in 1989; it was first offered as an undergraduate major in fall 1997. Until then, students could concentrate on ASL through the interdepartmental degree program. Forty-seven students have gone through the ASL program since 1994. Eighteen of them have graduated as ASL majors since 1997, and 12 students have selected the program as their minor.

Besides standard basic language classes, the University's bachelor's degree program provides advanced literature and culture courses, the only one in New York State doing so. All classes at the 200 level and beyond are taught in ASL, immersion-style.

In addition to the major, the program offers an ASL teacher-certification track to meet the growing demand for ASL instructors in high schools.

The panel presentation was part of the biweekly ASL Forums held throughout the school year. The forums provide ASL students with the opportunity to learn about deaf culture and the deaf community. Events are signed and voice-interpreted to help comprehension for beginning students.

Previous forums have looked at the deaf Holocaust experience and the deaf African-American community in Rochester, and featured performers from NTID and a deaf storyteller from South Africa. The Rochester area's own deaf community is the largest, per-capita, in the country.



Maintained by University Public Relations
Please send your comments and suggestions to:
Public Relations.

 
SEARCH:     Directory | Index | Contact | Calendar | News | Giving
                     ©Copyright 1999 — 2004 University of Rochester